In today’s modern world, technology seems to be not only taking over our lives, but also growing at a rate that the public and government is having a hard time keeping up with it, especially in regards to privacy and regulation issues.The largest of these concerns is the use of drones; and what is even more surprising is that it is does not seem to be a conservative’s legacy that will be the controversial usage of covert drones but instead a Democrat’s.Instead of leaving a legacy of job creation, increased green jobs, and the closing of Gitmo, President Obama’s legacy may very well be the disturbing issue of Drone use in the name of “national security”, and how, and if, their use have really increased America’s national security making its citizens safer.
Let us compare the use of drones during Conservative President George Bush’s presidency from 2001-2009 versus President Barack Obama’s presidency from 2009-present.When one thinks of conservatives and their national security policies, many would figure that under the Bush administration drone usage was at an all time high.The harsh reality is this is untrue, and the difference between the two administrations, in regards to drone usage, is shocking.From 2001-2009 the Bush administration conducted less than 250 drone attacks that killed about over 400 people.President Obama’s administration as of Jan 2014 conducted 390 covert drone attacks that resulted in over than 2400 deaths in less than 5 years.(The Bureau of Investigative Journalism January 23, 2014).
Many conservatives believe that the Obama Administrations stance on drone attacks has given them a way out of detaining terrorists.AS Jo Becker and Scott Shane of the NY Times said, “Mr. Obama has avoided the complications of detention by deciding to take no prisoners alive.”In essence the current administration, via covert drone operations, doesn’t have to worry about habeas corpus.Conservatives also have worries that as drone technology increases, there is the possibility of the use of them in America which, in their eyes, would be a huge infringement on American civil liberties and the 2nd amendment.For example, if a covert drone operation were to be used on a certain group or person of interest, what will happen to the info inadvertently collected on an innocent person during that operation?
Then there is the matter of public safety.Currently there are about 18,000 local law enforcement officers in the United States, and some believe that drone usage would not only cut down public safety costs when it comes to police enforcement, but also help save lives of police officers.For example a police helicopter costs around $20 million, while a drone could cost a city $20,000.Then there are also the benefits of the usage of drones to help journalists bring more accurate reporting to the mainstream like in cases of natural disasters and environmental issues.But on the other side, there is the issue of groups like the paparazzi using drones to further infringe on the privacy of celebrities; and as with the death of Princess of Diana back in August of 1997, everyone is well aware of how dangerous the paparazzi can be in their pursuit of the perfect celebrity story.Would drone usage make this danger worse?
Lastly, there is the argument of regulations.As drone technology becomes more advanced and more available to the public, how will the usage of them be regulated?There are even $100 “do it yourself” drone kits, and Wire Magazine estimates that by 2015 the drone industry can be a $30 billion dollar industry, even though currently the commercial usage of drones is illegal in America.The FAA is expected to take over regulation of national drone usage by 2015, but they will only be dealing with the air space management of their usage not the political, ethical or legal aspects of the matter.Unfortunately, I think our government; especially with the over usage by the Obama administration has created a “Trojan Horse” in regards to covert drone operations.I do not think we will not be able to stop the domestic use of them or fully protect our civil rights as Americans when this time comes.Once again, Americans have allowed fear to take over and allow the introduction of another instrument that will destroy our right to privacy and civil liberties; and no matter how much they try, the Obama Administration will not be able to spin their way out of the part they played in this.
Israel and Palestine: two words that incite such emotions in so many hearts; two words that after being mentioned and discussed has been known to destroy lifelong friendships, incite arguments that can make a whole facebook feed go on for what seems miles, and now, not only endangers a whole region, but maybe even the peace of most of the world including the United States. Who would have ever thought that when the British and French Empires selfishly broke up the Ottoman empire in the beginning of the 20th century in order to gain control of a valuable trade route to India and the Suez Canal, that over 200 years later, most of the world would be suffering repercussions from that action? Now the world is left with the conflict of a sovereign state created in hopes to settle the great atrocity of the Holocaust on the foundation of a whole group of people being pushed out of their homes and land, restricted to a small piece of land twice the size of the District of Columbus, while suffering apartheid policies. Sounds like a story from the Roman times right? Well it’s not. It’s happening today in the treatment of the Arab Palestinians by Israel, and Israel’s refusal to stop playing the victim and recognizing it’s responsibility as the aggressor and key factor in the hope of obtaining any resolution to the Israeli Palestinian conflict. It is time that Israel is not only held responsible for the lack of peace, and the Hamas attacks in Israel, but that the rest of the world hears the Palestinians cries and not only holds Israel responsible while also making sure it’s sovereign state and people are protected, but also provides for the Palestinians the land promised to them in the original agreement and boundaries agreed upon before the 6 days war of 1967.
It is not a popular view to support a Palestinian state verbally or publically in America. Sometimes it is viewed as Anti-Semitic, and if you are a politician, you better wait until voted in before you even mention or hint to such a view. Why do you think the Obama administration has waited until 2014, halfway into Obama’s second term as president, to finally speak up against Israel’s apartheid policies? But there is also a legitimate fear as to why Israel, along with many Western countries fear expansion of any Arab state west of the Jordan. As stated by Daniel J. Elazar on the JCPA (Jewish Center for Public Affairs) website
Also, many feel that had Palestine agreed to the original armistice lines, instead of demanding total ownership of the Holy Land, between 1917 and 1948, they would have had their Palestinian state long ago. (Elazar, JCPA.org). Another component that is making the Two-State Solution hard to be approved is Israel’s very own leader, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu is very conservative, and he comes from a Revisionist Zionist background that calls for no negotiations with Hamas, which practically makes the passage of the solution impossible as Hamas is the main Palestinian voice when it comes to this political issue, believes that any agreement to give up any of Israel’s land up for a Palestinian state would threaten the state of Israel as it will make it harder for Israel to defend itself against her enemies east of Jordan, and who really does not think that Arab Palestinians are inherently capable of peace. As quoted in The Week back in June of 2011, Netanyahu stated, “Arabs by nature are incapable of any peaceful compromise or agreement.” Some would look at Netanyahu has too hard lined and unwilling to compromise, but when looking at this background of being a member of Israel elite special-operations unit Sayeret Matkal, his history of being a soldier in the Yom Kippur War, and the fact that his brother was murdered while trying to rescue the passengers of a hijacked plan by radical Palestinians in 1976, one can understand why he is unwilling to compromise with a group like Hamas whom he feels is a terrorist organization. (The Week, June 2011).
So what is the next step? One thing is for sure: the Israeli/Palestinian conflict cannot continue to go on as it is. While I can understand the need to protect an Israeli state in the Middle East, I also believe that A). the apartheid policies against Arab Palestinians must end immediately and B.) it is time that both parties compromised as the ignorance of the development of a Palestinian state can no longer continue; anything else will keep peace from really being attainable in the region East of Jordan and it will continue to endanger National Security in the United States. We must not forget that during the 1300 years of the spread of Muslim rule in the Holy Land after the Battle of Yarmouk (636 CE) Jews were treated with great respect by the Islamic Empire, far better than by the Christians, and were allowed to practice their religion freely. This was even considered the “golden age.” (Early History of Palestine). I do not believe that Palestinian Arabs are inherently unable to agree to peaceful coexistence with a Jewish state as their history has shown differently for over 1300 years during the ancient times. We also must not forget that Christians, Muslims, and Jews are in essence “religious cousins;” we all come from the house of Abraham, and if we would for a moment stop fighting and treating each other with distain and hatred, we would see we have more similarities than differences. For as Ibtisam Barakat said, “To Alef, the letter that begins the alphabets of both Arabic and Hebrew-two Semitic languages, sisters for centuries. May we find the language that takes us to the only home there is-one another’s hearts.”
For almost the past decade, Boston has been riddled with an epidemic of youth gun violence that more often than not ends in the untimely death of Boston’s youth. Many in Boston still remember the horrific November murders of Eyanna Flonory as she lay in the streets holding her slain baby boy Amani Smith, along with the three other victims Simba Martin, Levaughn Washum-Garrison and Marcus Hurd in the Blue Hill Avenue neighborhood of Boston as reported in the Boston Globe. Through the years, Boston has experienced young men being shot in broad daylight while waiting at MBTA stops, teenagers getting stabbed and murdered on packed public transportation buses, and even the murder of a 15- year old young man preparing to take the bus at Dudley station to school. According to city-data.com, for a small metropolis that has strict gun laws that come with mandatory gun sentencing, Boston’s murder rate clocked in at high 9.0 per 100K persons in 2012. These daunting numbers has sparked the city of Boston to try to come up with ways to curb the violence and murders amongst its youth population. The three main proposals bought by city officials and the mayor have been enforcing a curfew, starting a gun buy-back program, and adding more funds to train and hire more Boston Police. Solutions like the three listed above don’t and will not work because they do not attack the main issues behind the youth gun violence epidemic. In order to solve Boston’s youth gun violence outbreak, the city must find ways to address the culture disconnect of Boston’s youth, particularly the minority youth, more community involvement, and ways to make the guns being sold in the black market ineffective by capitalizing on the already shortage of ammunition all over the country.
Most recently, Bpdnews.com reported on Boston’s roll out of the new Boston Gun Buy-Back Program. The buy- back program is an effort to allow individuals, especially the youth, to turn in unregistered guns without the fear of repercussions of being sentenced by Boston’s mandatory unlicensed/unregistered gun laws. According to bpdnews.com, individuals will be able to drop off the guns at drop-off sites throughout Boston and surrounding metro areas and receive amnesty, as long as the gun was not used in a crime with no questions asked; and they will receive a $200 gift card in return; rifles and shotguns will be accepted but gift cards will not be given out for such firearms. The Boston Police commissioner’s hope is that they will reduce guns on the street that can be used for future violent crimes. Unfortunately, the police department failed to keep in mind three very important factors. Firstly, Boston youth, especially ones from urban areas, are not going to turn guns in for gift cards. These guns are bought and sold with cash for the reason of it being harder to track cash transactions, and urban youth are going to be mistrustful of any item given to them by a police agency that can be tracked. Secondly, most urban youth committing these crimes and buying these firearms are doing so for protection or gang related issues, and a gift card is not incentive enough for them to give up a firearm that could very well save their lives. Lastly, urban youth do not trust the police, and most guns circulating in the black market are stolen or have been used in a crime, so an individual will not risk turning in a gun that they bought underground not knowing what other crimes it has been used for risking being arrested for a crime that they did not commit. A gun buy- back program would work more for residents in suburban areas who have acquired guns for protection or hobby reasons, not for urban youth who distrust the police and use such firearms for protection or have used these guns for previous crimes which they will not receive amnesty for.
A second proposal has been a city wide curfew for youth, which would require certain age groups to be in by 9PM on weekdays and midnight on weekends. At first glance, this sounds like a great solution to youth violence and even cities like Oakland, Philadelphia, and Detroit at one time or another adopted such curfews. Unfortunately, the numbers are showing consistently that when it comes to curbing juvenile violence, curfews do not work. Michael Males, a social columnist, cited in News Works that in the city of Monrovia, California during the 90s, “juvenile arrests for non-curfew crimes increased 53 percent during the school months when the town's curfew was enforced. In July and August, when the curfew was not enforced, non-curfew youth crime went down 12 percent.” Lastly, it is important to remember that as quoted in News Work, “Nationwide, more than 80 percent of juvenile offenses take place between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. - outside most curfews." Enacting a curfew in Boston is just going to see an increase in youth violence occurrence outside of curfew times as national statistics have shown from cities across America, along with the fact that a lot of Boston’s recent youth murders have happened in broad daylight.
The last proposal is Governor Deval Patrick’s proposal to provide $11 million dollars to train and hire more police as reported by The Boston Globe. Why won’t this work? The urban youth already do not trust the police, and police presence in the city is not even coming close to solving the murders already happening in the city, especially with the unspoken urban rule of “no snitching; “ cops can’t even solve the murders on their current case load. Police presence didn’t stop 15-year-old Soheil Turner from being gunned down in broad daylight in a busy Dudley station, and that crime still has not been solved. Even Dorchester residents mentioned to Boston Globe journalists how rarely police are seen in their neighborhood. The fear amongst urban communities is that, as proven in the past, the increased police presence will only occur in the more affluent communities, not in the urban neighborhoods that seem to be forgotten when it comes to crime prevention.
So what’s the solution? There needs to be a combined effort amongst community leaders, especially in providing after school outreach programs for at risk youth, and instead of trying to control a firearm black market, that has ballooned so far out of control that the government has neither the money or manpower to stop it, there needs to be a program limiting ammunition. Community leaders need to address the fact that as stated in the Tampa Bay Times “8000 to 9000 African Americans are killed each year and 93 percent of them by [other] African Americans.” Outreach programs need to be created in Boston targeting urban youth to get involved with one another in projects such as after school programs, volunteering for organizations that will prompt them to work with and interact with one another reducing the risk of fighting against each other in gang violence. The last great solution involves ammunition. Ammunition is at a low in America causing individuals to stockpile them. Boston should be making it law that only certain retailers can sell ammunition and track the bullets from manufacturers, to retailers, to buyers. The legislation should also include that the gun owners are limited yearly to a set amount of bullets that they are allowed to buy and they can only buy ammunition for the guns they have legally registered in an electronic tracking system. Guns can’t work without ammunition, and it is easier to track the already limited ammunition supply in America versus the estimated 310 million firearms circulating in the black market. It is time that Boston got creative and bring into account more than statistics when coming up with solution to Boston youth violence. City officials need to get out into the communities and learn and understand the culture and economic dynamics that are plying into the youth violence of Boston along with the lack of outreach programs offered to our youth versus coming up with bureaucratic programs that do not and will not work.
The quickest way to start a fire without lighting a match in
America is to bring up the subject of gun control. You are more likely to make a friend out of a
conservative by insulting his/her mother than daring to mention banning all
firearms in America. Tell a liberal you
own guns, especially high-powered ones, and you spend your Sundays watching
football, drinking beer, and going to the gun range and watch how quickly they rescind
your invitation to dinner. With the
recent mass shootings in America and “Stand Your Ground Cases”, such as the Trayvon
Martin murder in Florida, the country is even more divided than ever on the
matter of gun control and the Second Amendment.
Many American’s feel that the estimated 310 million guns in America are
excessive and unacceptable along with the belief that if guns were banned
across the board in the United States, there would not be three gun deaths per
hour in the country. But is that really
the case? If you are quick to say yes,
step back and analyze cities like Chicago and the District of Columbia on how
well their strict gun laws are working in lowering their gun violence
rates. Or what about those large
billboards that are up along the mass pike highway with the live updated count
of how many people were killed in America by a gun? What those same signs don’t
tell you is that, despite having some of the strictest gun laws in the country,
Boston has 2.01 homicides per 100k population rate. For a small state whose largest city is one
of the smallest metropolises in the country, that’s a pretty large number, especially
for a state that is steadfast in its anti-gun and weapons law. The bottom line is this: America, since 1791, when the second amendment
was introduced, has, and will always be, a culture where guns and the right to
protect yourself and property exist.
Eliminating the right to bear arms is not just a violation of the
constitution, but it will also create a
dangerous imbalance in America where guns will become inaccessible to law abiding
citizens while the black market becomes even more flooded with illegal and
unregistered guns for access to dangerous criminals, terrorists groups
(domestic and foreign), and drug cartels.
Let’s take a look at the George Zimmerman trial and how the
media loves to use the issue of gun violence combined with the race card to
fire Americans up about gun control in this country. The death of Trayvon Martin was a horrible
tragedy, but even more tragic was how the media played the race card with the
case and how easily and quickly the country fell right in line with it. When the story first came out about Martin’s
death, all that was heard around the country was how it had to be racial, and
once again, a “white man was going to get away with killing or injuring an
African American.” Yet, when the facts came out that George Zimmerman was half
Hispanic, there was barely any mention of that correction by the media or
protesters. Then there was the matter of
all the civil rights groups, individuals, and famous musicians and actors
coming out to protest at the trial. What
a great show of support and coming together to support and speak out against a
senseless death. But what about the
outcry by the civil rights leaders and African American communities when it
comes to the epidemic of black on black crimes that are occurring in this
country? Yes, it is true that African
American men are seven times more likely to die of homicides than white or Hispanic
men; but the most important element of that statistic is that out of the black
men killed in America, 92 % of them are killed by other black men. But in high
profile cases that involve gun violence, the media or liberal agenda does not
want the public to know those numbers.
It fairs better for the gun control agenda to have the race card in play
in cases like the Trayvon Martin murder to spark more public outcry. The tragedy of Martin’s death is beyond
words, but there are young black men just like Trayvon dying every day in urban
communities all over the country by other black men, and most of the guns being
used are not legally owned, acquired, or registered.
A lot of anti-gun special interest groups, like the Brady
Campaign, love to push the gun violence statistics to back up their beliefs
that there are too many guns and gun violence in America, along with the fact
that it’s anti-gun control lobbyists who are spending the most money in
Washington. So let’s take a closer look
at the statistics. In 2013 nearly 19000
of the 31000 deaths by gun were by suicide.
That is over 61 percent! Despite this alarming percentage, the suicide
statistic has been largely ignored by the media, pro anti-gun lobbyists and
politicians on Capitol Hill. Why?
Because what sounds better when trying to sway the public: “31000 violent
deaths caused by guns “or “31000 deaths by gun in which 19000 were self-inflicted?”
Instead it makes better headlines and stories and works better for anti-gun
lobbyists to clump the statistics together, especially when trying to ban gun
ownership across the boards, even those of law abiding citizens. Now look at the statistic involving the money
spent on lobbying Capitol Hill by both groups.
Conservative pro-gun lobbyists spend more money than anti-gun
organizations like the Brady Campaign right? Wrong. In 2013 anti-gun lobbyists in Washington
spent $14 million. And the pro-gun
groups’ 2013 spending outline? $1.9
million; but liberals and the media don’t give you those numbers. They instead make groups like NRA out to be
the big bad wolf who is throwing money around to get the politicians in Washington
to blow the house down on gun law reformation like the three little pigs. Where is the media reporting on that since
they love to report on how much more money conservative special interest group
spend than liberal based ones? Liberal
special interests groups are outspending conservative ones by 17-1 on Capitol
Hill on the issue of gun control, but yet they are losing the battle. There goes the argument that Conservatives
are winning because of excessive special interest spending.
So why is the pro-gun agenda winning in America? The agenda is not working because the Second
Amendment states “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be
infringed.” It is a constitutional right
for citizens of the United States to bear arms and use those arms to protect
themselves, family, and their property.
Anti-gun supporters claim that when the Second Amendment was put into
the Constitution, America was a rural setting with little or no protection
offered to individuals other than the protection they provided for themselves;
in the 1700s guns were needed for personal and property protection. So what about today in America? There is no longer
the need for protection? Crime is not at a high right in the country? Anti-gun
groups would have Americans believe that yes, crime is a huge issue, but
because of guns, and banning guns across the board would, in fact, bring the
crime rate down like in Australia. Okay let’s
break that down, as well. To begin with,
Australia did not have a law written into its constitution that allowed the
accumulation of over 310 million firearms in its nation over a time span of
over 200 years. Australia also did not have the problem that America now has in
the millions, possibly hundreds of millions of unregistered and unaccounted for
firearms that are being circulated in the black market. With or without guns, unfortunately, there is
a large culture of violence in America, and citizens have the right, and should
have that right, to protect themselves against violent attacks by other
individuals. 48 percent of the American population will become the victim of a
crime at some point in their lives. Why would the American government want to
make it harder for their law abiding citizens to protect themselves from those
attacks, while at the same time allowing it to be easier for their attackers
and potential attackers to acquire the guns by pushing the firearm market into
a fully underground industry?
Lastly and most
importantly, the pro-gun agenda is winning in America because banning guns and
stricter gun laws do not work in this country.
Yes, there has been an overwhelming amount of mass shootings in this
country, but banning guns is not going to stop them. Mass shootings are all
over the news these days, but in reality they make up a very small percentage
of the gun deaths that occur in America every year. Even places like Norway, who have stricter
and more restrictive laws than America, especially when it regards to automatic
guns, couldn’t come up with a law that stopped individuals like Anders Brevik
who killed 77 people in a Norwegian mass shooting in 2011. But the most
alarming gun control statistics of all are not the mass shootings or number of
people killed by shootings, it’s the gun control numbers coming out of cities
like Boston, Chicago, and the District of Columbia, the most gun restrictive
cities in the United States. District
Columbia had, until the Supreme Court ruling that ruled that their city-wide
ban on firearms was a violation of the Second Amendment, had the most across
the board anti-gun law; a total ban on firearms inside the city of limits. Was DC safer after enacting the law? No; in
fact, the District of Columbia has one of the highest murder rates in the
country at almost triple the nation’s average. What about Chicago? Well,
Chicago has become the Wild West and clocked in well over 500 murders in 2013
while also being a city in America with one of the most restrictive gun laws.
Lastly, there is Boston. Living in Boston, one is aware of the mandatory gun
laws the liberal state has, but yet, even after being one of the country’s smallest
major cities along with having one of the strictest anti-gun laws, Boston is
averaging 2.01 murders per 100k people; for a small city, that is a very large
average. All over America, these numbers are common. Anti-gun laws are not working. Why? Because,
most crimes and murders committed in America are committed with stolen and/or
unregistered guns. Law abiding citizens
are left with strict laws that prevent them from buying the very firearms that
will protect them from such crimes, while the criminals have easy access to
guns in the black market. Why do you
think most mass shooters pick gun-free zones to commit the shootings in? There
is less chance of a citizen with a legal gun being around to challenge and stop
them.
If we had wanted to
address the issue of gun control, we should have done it before the black
market acquired millions of unregistered guns which we do not have the money or
manpower to monitor or control. Just
like in 9/11, we can’t allow the media or special interest groups to play into
our fears that cause us to make rash and illogical decisions to try to combat
the problem. Since there are hundreds of
millions of guns registered and unregistered in America and over 500 gun manufactures
what do we do? Well the only thing that
there is a shortage of in regards to firearms in this country right now is
ammunition. Why don’t we capitalize on
that shortage? We can do three very easy
and effective things to cut down on gun violence in America without infringing
on the constitutional right to bear arms and protect oneself and property; they
are: ban semi-automatic and automatic firearms; ban any sell of guns to
unlicensed owners and by unlicensed sellers; and most importantly, restrict and
track the sale of ammunition. Since
there is already a shortage of bullets in America, it will be easier to track
the ammunition from the starting point of the manufacturers, to supplier, and
finally to gun owner. Put a limit on the
amount of ammunition a gun owner can buy along with making it only possible to
buy ammunition for the guns you have legally registered into the system. Does it solve the gun violence issue 100
percent? No, but it will come closer than any across the boards ban on firearms
and greatly reduce the country’s gun violence.
The Black market can’t be stop in regards to firearms; the amount of
unregistered guns in America has ballooned too far out of control for the
government to do anything but try to curb and decrease its sales. Drug cartels
and terrorists are acquiring guns from America’s black market at an alarming
rate, but if they can’t get ammunition or acquire the ammunition without having
a tracking system attached to the bullets, the guns are worthless to them. Let’s not forget that yes, the world is very
different than it was in 1791; it is far more dangerous, and the last solution
to the gun violence in America is the one that restricts law abiding
citizens from executing their constitutional right of bearing arms to protect
themselves and property from those dangers.
The global warming numbers are staggering, scary, and
daunting: ten warmest years on record have occurred in the past 15 years; the
6-8 inches rise of sea levels in the last 100 years; a 67.5% increase in the
concentration of the Earth’s carbon dioxide from the year 1900; the depletion
of valuable fossil fuels by human consumption; a decrease of the polar ice caps
at a rate of nine percent every 10 years; and the almost one degree Celsius increase
in the Earth’s average temperature in the last two centuries. The debate is not if Global Warming is
happening; the real debate is rather the warming is due to human negligence and
abuse or if the warming is part of the world’s natural cycle of climate change. But what if there is a third option? What if the global warming is due to a
combination of both factors and the solution requires research and solutions
from both opposing sides? It is time to
stop debating on the obvious existence of global warming, and instead, attack
the issue head on as both a man made and climate change instead of either or.
In his lecture “The Truth about Global Warming-Science and
Distortion,” Nobel Peace Prize Winner Stephen Schneider pointed out that the mass
media and special interest groups from both sides are creating a fraudulent
debate in regards to global warming. “Special
interest groups will take one component, put it out of context, and spin to fit
their interests, and you end up with “the end of the world” vs. “good for
you.” This is called “two lowest
probability outcomes” and when left by the media and special interests to the
public to figure out on their own, the outcome is “utter distortion.” Instead
of being an issue that is being solved by the systems of science, the problem
of global warming has become the rope in a special interest game of tug-of-war,
and the mud puddle in the middle is the stockpile of the real facts that become
so muddled in the dirt, no one can decipher or tell them apart. (“The Truth about Global Warming-Science and
Distortion,” Stephen Schneider).
What are the facts? The fact is global warming is very
real. NASA defines global warming as
“the average global surface temperature increase from human emissions of
greenhouse gases.” Environmentalists
sticking steadfast to their hypothesis that this global warming is due humans’
excessive use, particularly in the past 200 years since the industrial
revolution in the ninetenth century, of valuable fossil fuels, causing
environmental problems of dangerously high carbon dioxide levels, record heat
waves, melting ice caps leading to record high sea levels and stronger storms,
disappearing forests, and the extinction of thousands of the world’s
species. Then there is the other side of
the argument that includes scientists and special interest groups who feel that
there is an alternative explanation to global warming which is that of natural
climate change. Most conservatives
believe that climate change is the cause of global warming and that most
liberals and global warming supporters are too quick to predict the cause
without weighing out all the causes. See
the tug-of-war battle now?
So who’s right? What if both are right? The fact of the
matter is that the Earth has been experiencing natural cycles of cooling and
warming since its creation over 4.5 billion years ago. Polar ice caps have been melting, freezing,
melting, and then freezing again since the beginning of time. The Bering Strait, Pangaea, Himalayas, Swiss
Alps, Mt. Denali, and the Grand Canyon all came from melting glaciers and ice
caps, and the rising and receding of sea levels. There are whole mountain ranges miles below
the ocean that were once high above sea level.
Even during the medieval times, it is believed that there was actually a
warmer period of summer than the ones the Earth has been experiencing in the
past 15 years. One also cannot forget
that, since its creation over 4 billion years ago, the Earth has experienced at
least 4 Ice Age periods; the last one having occurred about 1.8 million years
ago during the Pleistocene Period (livescience.com). All these natural occurrences are examples of
and proof that the Earth does have natural shifts in its climate cycles. These examples are also similar, if not more
extreme, than the effects the planet is experiencing in the global warming of
today’s day and age.
On the other hand, one can’t deny the dangerous and
debilitating effects that the human species are having on the planet with the
over consumption of fossil fuels and over saturation of the Earth’s atmosphere
with carbon dioxide. There is no denying that the oceans are getting warmer,
and cities on the coasts, like New Orleans and even New York City, are experiencing
stronger and more powerful storm fronts as a result of those increased average
temperatures of the ocean waters and eroding of marshlands and beaches that act
as nature’s “sponge” to help protect coastal cities and towns against flooding.
Countries like China, the US, and India
are the world’s highest coal consumers at 47 percent, 14 percent, and 9 percent
respectively (eia.gov). With an overall
oil consumption that is 25 percent of the world’s total production and oil
companies like Exxon making $104 million per day, of course the US special
interest groups like Koch Industries wants the public to believe the hypothesis
that natural climate change is the cause of global warming (The Week, Feb. 16,
2013). With new pipeline construction projects such
as the Keystone Pipeline, on standby with a potential of over $130 billion in
oil revenue over a course of 20 years (Keystone-xl.com), why would special
interest oil groups or the politicians backed by these groups want the public
to believe that the consumption of fossil fuels is causing dangerous global
warming effects on the planet?
My argument is not for either side; I believe that the issues
of global warming are a combination of both natural climate changes and man made
pollution factors. There is just not
enough evidence to discredit natural climate change causation. We haven’t been tracking weather patterns for
long enough time, nor have we had the satellite technology needed to accurately
study the climate system factors, such as global average cloudiness, to
scientifically discredit the Earth’s natural climate cycles as contributors to
global warming. Why can’t we work to
find greener and cleaner energy options and track the planet’s natural climate
change so when our children’s children are faced with the same issues or
problems, we have provided the history of science for them to refer to so they
don’t repeat the mistakes we are making with this issue today? I also can’t deny the clear facts on the
environmentalists’ side as well. Having
lived in Alaska as a child for 4 years, and recently visiting again this year,
I have witnessed that humans definitely do have a direct effect on the planet.
When I went to go see a famous glacier right outside of Girdwood that I used to
visit as a child; I was greatly shocked to see that in place of the beautiful
ice blue glacier that came all the way down the mountain was nearly almost gone
and was mostly replaced with mud and grass.
As Stephen Schneider stated, we are living in world of utter
distortion when it comes to the matter of global warming. (“The Truth about Global Warming-Science and
Distortion,” Stephen Schneider). Why are
we sitting around arguing over what the Greenland tipping point is or where it
is? Why are we not just coming together
on the simple fact that the Greenland tipping point is there no matter the
cause and work instead to find a way to avoid it? The question is not rather or not we come up
with greener energy options and use them, because we are at the point where now
that question does not matter; we don’t have a choice. Green energy is now our reality, and it doesn’t
matter if it’s Mother Nature’s fault or Exxon’s. This is the time that the public takes the “two
lowest probability outcomes” that the media and special interest groups offer and
throw it out the door. What if we, as
the public, make the question of “why" irrelevant and force energy
companies to face the real relevant question of “how do we fix it?” Compromise is how we do it. The green energy conversion can’t be done
overnight; so let’s meet in the middle and tap into our natural gas options along with building
the Keystone Pipeline to gain some energy dependence and economic stability as
a country as we make the transition and
reinvest in rebuilding a planet friendly, profitable, and new infrastructure. At the end of the day, when our sea levels
have risen three ft. and our coasts are being hit by storms on the scale we
never could have imagined, our great grandchildren are not going to care who
was right about causation; they are going to care about the fact we failed at finding
a solution. Since we agree there is
global warming but not on causation, why don’t we parallel, double park,
sideways? Let’s treat the problem as a
causation of both factors and devote valuable time, effort, and ideas on the
real matter at hand and close the door on utter distortion by truly finding a
solution to global warming that covers all bases.
No one in America or the
world could have even come close to imagining how much the world was about to
change on that sunny, early autumn day in September, 2001. When you ask
American's to reflect back on 9/11, none of them say that they imagined that on
that day, when they woke up, they would witness right before their very eyes
the death of 2977 innocent people within an hour's time, see two buildings that
were landmarks of America's capitalism and financial strength topple to ash,
fathom that anyone could come close to striking the Pentagon which is quite
possibly the most famous symbol of military might in the world, or months
later the United States would begin a war that almost 2 decades later would still be ongoing. The shock was only
increased with the news that a plane had crashed in a Pennsylvania fields
killing everyone aboard after its passengers had rushed the cockpit trying to
stop hijackers. Most importantly, Americans couldn't fathom the dark
world of polarization, financial despair, and national security policies that
would be adopted turning the once "Live Free or Die" mentality of
this great land into a land of wire-tapping and violated civil liberties in the
name of the "War on Terrorism." After all, these things happened in
Tom Clancy books and in Russia, not in the United States of America.
Wrong.
As the days and weeks
progressed following 9/11 there was great "sense" of patriotism.
Americans became proud by each day hearing stories of everyday public
service heroes who went up the stairs of the World Trade Center Towers as
everybody was frantically going down trying to escape. Stories of phone
recordings began to depict the super hero- like actions of the passengers of
United Airlines Flight 93 who sacrificed their own lives to bring down their
hijacked plane thwarting the hijackers plans to crash the Boeing 757 into the
White House had everybody all over the country quoting passenger Todd Beamer's
famous last words, "Let's Roll." America was on a patriotic
"high" and the come down was about to crash not just individuals and
American moral but also the economy and very foundation and constitution that the
United States was built on.
Who could forget the
famous National Terrorism Advisory System that the newly Homeland Security
Department had so miraculously come up with? American's suddenly felt “safer”
glued to their televisions looking for “the color of the day” just like Smokey
the Bear warning elementary school children of the danger level of forest
fires. Fear had taken over America overnight and invaded homes and lives like a
thief in the night stealing any real sense of reality and what being an
American was all about. The President was easily given the power to thrust the
country into two wars that has already cost American Taxpayers close to $1 trillion
and, according to the Center for Budget and Policies, will account for almost
half the projected national debt of $20 trillion by 2019. That's not even
the tip of the iceberg. American citizens stood back out of fear and
allowed their elected officials to vote “yes” on the Patriot Act which essentially
allowed the government to impinge on god given civil liberties by wire-tapping civilian
phones and accessing their public library, medical, and financial records
without warrants. Yes, not only did America allow its own government to
spy on them, but they PAID, and continue to pay, them to do it.
America's dirty little
secret is not just the NSA; it's also the fact that the defense division of the
government employs over 800,000 employees, most of them private contractors,
and those same private contractors not only don't have to answer to Congress,
but they also are enticing government employees to work for their firms, and
then turning around and "renting" them back out to the same federal
agencies they hired them from at 2-3 times the cost. On top of that, it would take
all day to explain how the American intelligence world has, currently, 51
agencies that do the same job of federally tracking terrorist's flow of money.
("The 'Top Secret America' Created by Sept. 11", NPR). No
wonder the United States’ government has a problem with oversight of its
intelligence community; nobody knows who is coming or going. So why are
American tax payers continuously okay with allowing their senators and
representatives to write blank checks to the defense departments? It's like
giving the wife the Black Card and setting her loose in Barneys during their
yearly Christian Louboutin sale: you
just don't do, but America does.
Some would oppose and
insist all the above is to save lives and the future safety of America and subsequently
the world. But is America safer? Are lives being saved? 9/11 cost al
Qaeda roughly $500,000 and they killed 2977 people in one day along with another
4340 lives in other attacks all over the world. What is America’s
numerical breakdown on their fight against al Qaeda and terror? The United States is $3.3 trillion in the
hole, all connected to the backlash of 9/11; and the government has instigated two
wars that has killed, soldiers and civilians combined, over 140,000 people while,
as of 2012, al Qaeda had lost 50 of its
influential leaders. According to the score board America is not winning,
not even close.
Despite these facts,
America is now polarized on the issues more than ever. Insults are thrown
at each other faster than at the family Thanksgiving table when the subject of
national security is brought up. In general, the Republicans will be the
first to claim that the above is worth all the costs and the only way to deal
with terrorism is to strike first, hard, and aggressively. Democrats, on
the other hand, couldn't agree more; they believe that the course the government
has taken in response to 9/11 has cost too many lives, destroyed the country
morally and financially, and are not working. Most importantly, Democrats now
believe that, if allowed to continue, the Patriot Act will forever compromise
the very civil liberties that makes America the beacon of freedom to the rest
of the World.
As America looks ahead
to upcoming international affairs such as the Russia/Crimenia/Ukraine controversy,
they must realize that things will only get worse unless they commit to moving
on using 9/11 truly as a learning experience, which has yet to be done.
Politicians need to stop trying to sway voters by using their fears from
9/11 and insecurity over national security as ways to sway the vote, but citizens
must also realize that the true power lies in the constituents. Conservative
or Liberal, maybe it's time to really commit to Obama's plan of alienating al
Qaeda from the majority of the Islam world. The reality is that newly
instigated revolutions such as Arab Spring seem to be more of a threat to al
Qaeda and their supreme goal of establishing a "caliphate” than any War on
Terror raged against them ("The World After 9/11: Part I",
Bruce Riedel; Yale Global online). Despite
what most Americans are lead to believe by the media and political leaders, the
Islam world detests extremists; the concept goes against every aspect of their
religion and the Koran. Instead of
trying to alienate itself from the Islam world, The United States should
recognize that they may quite possibly be its most powerful ally when it comes
to fighting and eliminating al Qaeda.
It is important America
looks at the mistakes of the Soviet Union during their war with the Taliban in
Afghanistan in the 1980's. More focus needs to be brought on issues such
as the conflicts between Pakistan and India, and the fact that the largest al
Qaeda support now lies in the heart of Pakistan and its government. Iraq
needs to be counseled on how to improve Sunni and Shiite relations to avoid
further recruitment by al Qaeda of disenfranchised citizens, and focus how
civil wars in countries like Syria can be used for recruitment purposes by
terrorists. Hindsight is 20/2 so maybe it’s time to use the past to
regain perfect vision of how to better the future. America must find a
way to bring bipartisanship back so the country can confront the one issue that
threatens America more than any nuclear weapon or terrorist threat: separation.
9/11 was meant to separate the country as a nation and make Americans prisoners
of their own fear, and they have done and become just that while al Qaeda hides
behind the chess board screaming, "Check Mate."
I still remember clearly where I was and what I was doing the day of the Boston Bombings, because I had been complaining all day about having to work on Patriots Day, especially since it was such a beautiful, sunny day. I was taking a late lunch-break by browsing through my Facebook page when I saw that somebody had posted that two bombs had gone off at the Boston Marathon's finish line. Thinking it was a sick joke, I immediately pulled up MSNBC where I was able to confirm the sad and tragic truth. I immediately knocked on the exam room door and waited for my boss to step out to give him the news. The whole office rushed to the front desk computer and started to look up news feeds to get more information. More patients started to trickle in for their appointments, one of them even just having come from his home in Copley, and they all had our same reaction: fear and shock. I think we all instinctively were brought back to 9-11 as the initial fear took over us. I even called my roommate frantically asking her to come pick me up from work in Newton, because I refused to take public transportation home too afraid and sure that the MBTA would also at some point that day be targeted; I was convinced this was not the end of the attacks and surely there would be more.
Looking back, I learned a lot about myself just from my initial reactions of that day. I learned how fear can easily control us as individuals and make us go against every bit of logic, morals, and values we have. Taking a look back to a year ago, I am also upset at myself for being so okay when martial law was declared in the pursuit of the Tsarnaev brothers; in hindsight, after reading The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Law Enforcement Title (found with this link : http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/call/docs/10-16/ch_11.asp ), it is clear that this decision by our government officials rode on a thin, dangerous line of what our constitution considers to be just caus to call in the United States Military to solve domestic issues. None of us spoke up or even dared to question these decisions, just as we set back and allowed the NSA to violate our civil rights, liberties, and freedoms following 9-11. Months following the Boston Bombings, I was haunted by my inability to stand up and exercise my rights as an American; rights that people all over the world die and kill for every day while I am afforded the luxury of those same very rights being a birthright. One injustice or crack in the system threatens us all, and at the time of the attacks we all allowed our fears and prejudices to shadow that valuable fact.
How quickly we forget lessons we were supposed to learn in WWII when one crazed, fanatical man who's own insecurities led him to obsessed racism of a whole race of people, and then, through fear, was able to incite the masses to try to eliminate that same group of people off the face of the earth. One man, who could not accept responsibility for his own failures as a young man, was able to take fear and prejudice and turn it into a hatred and racism that became so radical, extreme, and evil that it allowed a whole country of people to stand back and let more than 7 million people be killed just because of their religious association and declare war that ended up turning the whole world upside down. Yes, Adolf Hitler is the man I am talking about, and yes, he was able to incite World War II by one thing and one thing only: generating fear amongst the masses over an exaggerated threat. Terrorism at its best. In Germany the terrorism was not from an outside source, however; it was as terrorism by the people on its own people. The German people became victims of their own fear and despair by not being able to step out from under the cloak of the unknown created by it's misguided leaders to look out and see that, in fact, the Boogie Man was not lurking around the corner; their fear overshadowed the fact that the only danger was conforming and not standing up for what was right This too goes for America following the Boston Marathon Bombings.
The Boston Bombings have exposed the fact that we, as a county and people, have come to this dangerous fork in the road; the impasse where we must decide if we are going to give into our fears and forget everything our forefathers painstakingly mapped out for this country that Spring day in 1787 during the Philadelphia Convention, or be true Americans by exercising those rights that started on the same day we were celebrating the day of the bombings: Patriots Day. Patriots Day isn't just a day for us to get a day off of work to veg out and watch the Boston Marathon on television. It's a day celebrating the Battles of Lexington and Concord. It's not called "The shot heard around the world" for no reason at all. On April 19, 1775 American colonists gave their lives to begin a battle that would result in a country with a foundation so inspiring, beautiful, and strong, that over 300 years later, people from all over the world would still be continuing to give their lives for just a shot at being a part of that very same country and her ideals . How dare we jeopardize it all out of fear.
Fear is not a new concept to this country; and fear is not an enemy we haven't time after time conquered as a unified nation. Why start now? We must all learn from this situation along with lessons from the past and stop doing the terrorists' missions for them. Yes, there is a danger of acts like these happening again, but the acts we should be the most fearful of are the ones we and our government commit against ourselves and the constitution in the names of "protection' and "safety." We can't allow ourselves to profile one another; we must stay tolerant towards one another's religious and civil liberties; in fact, it is our DUTY to protect not just our rights but our fellow Americans' rights as well. How? By using the very tool our forefathers made sure we would have when they wrote that 4 paged document in 1787: our voice. The minute we stop speaking up out of intimidation, the terrorists and radicals have won.
Our issues are not Islam, Al-Qaeda, or even terrorism; our issue is one another. We must be careful of who we label our enemies and the power we give up by quickly jumping to conclusions and refusing to look at our own actions as a nation as possible breeding grounds for the very hate that these extremists and ,in the case of the Boston Bombers, criminals are cultivating. We are the catalyst, and until we accept this fact and work to rectify it, we will continue on the same tragic, torturous path. The Boston Bombings were not attacks by Islamic radical groups on America and its citizens and residents like on 9-11. They were acts by two young, confused men, who had no direction or positive figure to turn to. They were immigrants who came to this country and became citizens with the hopes of experiencing the American Dream only to find out that their adopted land did not consider them a part of that very dream.
Through our ignorance and inability as a country to generally accept and embrace things that are different from us, we took two non-radical citizens and treated them like enemies creating a hate so strong and desperate that they felt the only way to ratify that hate was to kill. Is it a excuse or free get out of jail card for the younger brother who will now stand trial for these actions? No, but I think it is a valuable lesson we should all take heed to. We must realize that as we speak, there are hundreds more just like the Tsarnaev brothers teetering on the edge of either becoming positive members of our communities or giving into radicalism out of desperation and anger. Are we going to learn from our mistakes of the past caused by our own ignorance and prejudices and make these individuals our friends or enemies? Are we once again going to be that nation that was such a beacon of light and freedom for the world that millions gave up their lives just for chance at being a part of it; just to have those "inalienable rights" that we now are so willing to throw away in the name of fear and ignorance? I hope not. I hope that we all take a moment to allow the Boston Bombings to allow us to heal, grow, and open our eyes to the world around us, and the next time we get the chance, we do just as is written on the statue of liberty: "Give me your tired your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breath free. The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door."