The Emma
Maersk, part of a Danish shipping line, is shown in the
photos below.
This is very graphic, and a great commentary. Don't know who circulated it on Facebook, but it really does say it all.
What a ship....no wonder 'Made in China ' is displacing North American made goods big time. This monster transports goods across the Pacific in just 5 days!! Another two will soon be commissioned. These ships were commissioned by Wal-Mart to get their imported goods from China .... They hold an incredible 15,000 containers and have a 207 foot deck beam!! The full crew is just 13 people on a ship longer than a US Aircraft Carrier which has a crew of 5,000. With its 207' beam it is too big to fit through the Panama or Suez Canals .
It is strictly transpacific. Cruise speed: 31 knots. The goods arrive four days before the typical container ship (18-20 knots) on a China-to-California run. 91% of Wal-Mart products are made in China. So this behemoth is hugely competitive even when carrying perishable goods. The ship was built in five sections. The sections are floated together and then welded. The command bridge is higher than a 10-story building and has 11 cargo crane rigs that can operate simultaneously unloading the entire ship in less than two hours.
Additional info:
Country of origin -
Denmark
Length - 1,302 ft
Width - 207 ft
Net cargo -
123,200 tons
Engine - 14 cylinders in-line diesel engine
(110,000 BHP)
Cruise Speed - 31 knots
Cargo
capacity - 15,000 TEU (1 TEU = 20 cubic feet)
Crew - 13
people!
First trip - Sept. 08, 2006
Construction cost - US
$145,000,000+
Silicone painting applied to the ship bottom
reduces water resistance and saves 317,000 gallons of diesel
per year.
Editorial Comment!
A recent
documentary in late March, 2010 on the History Channel noted that
all of these containers are shipped back to China,
EMPTY!
Yep, that's right.
We send
nothing back on these ships.
What does that tell you
about the current financial state of the west in crisis?
So
folks, just keep on buying those imported goods (mostly gadgets)
until you run out of money. Then you may wonder what the cause
of unemployment in the U..S,
UK, Canada and even in Australia????
Gaia, mother of all,
I shall sing,
the strong foundation, the oldest one.
She feeds everything in the world.
Whoever walks upon her sacred ground,
or moves through the sea,
or flies through the air, it is she
who nourishes them from her treasure-store.
Queen of Earth, through you
beautiful children
beautiful harvests,
come.
It is you who gives life to mortals,
and who takes life away.
Blessed is the One you honour with a willing heart.
One who has this has everything.
Their fields thicken with life-giving corn,
their cattle grow heavy in the pastures,
her house brims over with good things.*
It is you who honoured them,
sacred goddess, generous spirit.
Farewell mother of the gods,
bride of starry Heaven.
For my song, allow me a life
my heart loves.
Homeric Hymn to Gaia XXX, translated by Jules Cashford.
* The original pronoun was, of course, "he". I changed it to remember that not all Beings of the Earth are "he".I suspect Gaia, in all Her magnificent diversity, would approve.
Not more slowly than frayed human attention can bear, but slow enough to be stately, deliberate, a ritual we can't be sure will indeed move from death into resurrection.
As the bright silver inch by inch is diminished, options vanish, life's allurements. The last silver lies face down, back hunched, a husk.
But then, obscured, the whole sphere can be seen to glow from behind its barrier shadow: bronze, unquenchable, blood-light. And slowly, more slowly than desolation overcame, overtook the light, the light is restored, outspread in a cloudless pasture of spring darkness where firefly planes fuss to and fro, and humans turn off their brief attention in secret relief.
No matter: the rite contains its power, whether or not our witness rises toward it; grandeur plays out the implacable drama without even flicking aside our trivial fail to respond.
And yet we are spoken to, and sometimes we do stop, do, do give ourselves leave to listen, to watch. The moon, the moon we do after all love, is dying, are we to live on a world without moon? We swallow a sour terror.
Then that coppery sphere, no-moon become once more full-moon, visible in absence. And still without haste, silver increment by silver increment, the familiar, desired, disregarded brilliance is given again, given and given.
Denise Levertov from This Great Unknowing: Last Poems, 1999, New Directions Press
Here's an article, written by someone who is unaware, perhaps, of the decades long work contemporary pagans, Goddess workers, eco-feminists, and other Gaians have been doing. Huzzah - pass it on. He addresses what we have been talking about for so many years, the urgent and potent need to re-myth our world, to re-sanctify the Mother.
Somewhere between these two quotes lies the future:
“And I would like to emphasize that nobody on this planet is going to be untouched by the impacts of climate change.”
“The
Judeo-Christian worldview is that man is at the center of the universe;
nature was therefore created for man. Nature has no intrinsic worth
other than man’s appreciation and moral use of it.”
The first quote is from Rajendra Pachauri,
chairman of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, summing up the dire and much-discussed findings of its recent
report: Human civilization — its technology, its war games, its helpless
short-sightedness and addiction to fossil fuels — is wrecking the
environment that sustains all life. Time is running out on our ability
to make changes; and the world’s, uh, “leadership” — political,
corporate — has shown little will to step beyond more of the same, to
figure out how we can reduce carbon emissions and live in eco-harmony,
with a sense of responsibility for the future.
"But
maybe we can start learning, at long last, that we are not the masters
of the universe and that “dominion” and exploitation are immature
expressions of power."
The second quote is from radio talk-show host Dennis Prager,
writing recently in the National Review Online. He goes on, in his
remarkable rant against environmentalism, to point out that “worship of
nature was the pagan worldview” and “for the Left, the earth has
supplanted patriotism.” Eventually he compares environmentalism to
loving wild dogs more than mauled children.
Prager’s diatribe
isn’t my normal reading matter and I only bring it up here because I
think it has relevance to the leadership void I’ve been pondering. The
contemptuous dismissal of nature as lacking intrinsic worth — an
unworthy competitor with God for human allegiance — may no longer have
mainstream credibility, but, like racism, it’s part of the mindset that
has shaped Western civilization.
“And God said,
Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have
dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and
over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing
that creepeth upon the earth.”
We’re still
caught up in the momentum of dominion. Thus: “. . . for all the alarming
warnings generated by the scientific community and confirmed by the
IPCC’s comprehensive analysis of that science,” according to a recent
Common Dreams article, “world governments and the powerful private
sector have done next to nothing to meet the challenge now before
humanity.”
Indeed, as Elizabeth Kolbert points
out in The New Yorker: “Currently, instead of discouraging fossil-fuel
use, the U.S. government underwrites it, with tax incentives for
producers worth about four billion dollars a year.” We’ve got, as the
IPCC report states, “a 15-year window” to start making serious changes
in how we structure our world. Human society will need, the Common
Dreams piece says, to “revolutionize the structures of its economies,
food systems, and energy grids.”
This is not going
to happen — not at current levels of awareness, concern and
empowerment. This is the dawning realization I find myself less and less
able to live with. Climate change and global weather chaos — droughts
and fires, tsunamis and tidal waves, crop failure, undrinkable water,
devastating cold, rising oceans, new levels of social turmoil — are the
future we are unable to hold off. But maybe we can start learning, at
long last, that we are not the masters of the universe and that
“dominion” and exploitation are immature expressions of power.
My only hope is
that, in so learning — as humanity finds itself increasingly entangled
with environmental chaos and recognizes its utter vulnerability to
nature — we will begin to transcend our isolated sense of entitlement to
do with Planet Earth what we will and revolutionize the way we organize
every aspect of our social structure, rethinking ten millennia of
dominance-motivated social organization. Nobody, after all, no matter
how wealthy and fortified, is immune to the impact of a changing
climate. We’re all in it
together. We’re part of nature, not its master. This concept is the
missing foundation stone of contemporary civilization.
It was in this
state of mind that I read Prager’s essay, wondering if such an awareness
change were possible, or whether, as the consequences of unsustainable
living intensified, we’d become, instead, increasingly isolated and
survivalist in our thinking. “Worship of
nature was the pagan worldview,” he wrote, sounding the note of ultimate
contempt for any suggestion that environmental sustainability matters
and our way of life needs to change profoundly.
Perhaps the word
“pagan” embodies the most deeply embedded prejudice in the Western,
civilized mindset — the first and last justification for global
dominance. Pagans are the ultimate “other.” We’ve built a moral
structure on this prejudice, and as a consequence the U.S. government
continues to subsidize rather than tax fossil fuel production. As a
consequence, we’re far more prepared to go to war than we are to make
peace with the planet.
We have to undo this prejudice before it undoes us.
Published on Thursday, April 10, 2014 by Common Dreams
In the house made of dawn in the house made of evening twilight, in beauty may I walk with beauty above me, with beauty below me, with beauty beside me I walk with beauty all around me I walk with beauty it is finished." .......Navajo (Din`e)
This is a prayer/poem I sometimes read as a way of remembering how to "walk". I love the Navajo understanding of the continual motion and transformation of life, and their so very important understanding that, from the "house of Dawn" to the "house of Twilight" we can choose to realize beauty all around us. And their understanding of "beauty" means all that is good, beneficial, worthy of gratitude.
The Rainbow Bridge, an important sacred site for Navajo mythology
"As opposed to the other Navajo [Diné] Chant Ways, which are used to effect a cure of a problem, the Blessing way [Hózhó
jí] is used to bless the "one sung over," to ensure good luck, good
health and blessings for all. It is sometimes referred to by English
speaking Diné as being "for good hope." The
name of the rite, Hózhó jí, is translated as Blessingway, but that is
certainly not an exact translation. In the Navajo language (diné bizaad)
the term encompasses everything that is interpreted as good - as
opposed to evil, all that is favorable for man. It encompasses such words as beauty,
harmony, success, perfection, well-being, ordered, ideal. The intent of
this rite is to ensure a good result at any stage of life, and
therefore the translation of Blessingway.”
http://www.stoptellingwomentosmile.com/ Here's a wonderful series of posters created by artist Tatyana Fazlalizadeh that ring true. Remember the song "Give Me The Night" (Give me the silvered streets............)? A young woman's urban experience is a very different experience from that of a young man. For one thing, it's scary to walk the streets at night, full of menacing men, fear of rape. In the daytime, young women are often subject to harassment, and a different kind of predatory attention that, instead of innocent flirtation, often veils a hostile undertone. I remember it well, the fear and the sense of psychic, and sometimes physical, invasion. Being old has it's perks, and one is that I'm invisible to men, which I thoroughly enjoy.
Stop Telling Women to Smile is an art series by Tatyana Fazlalizadeh.
The work attempts to address gender based street harassment by placing
drawn portraits of women, composed with captions that speak directly to
offenders, outside in public spaces. Tatyan Falalizadeh is an illustrator/painter based in Brooklyn, mostly
known for her oil paintings. Having recently branched out into public
art as a muralist, STWTS was born out of the idea that street art can be an impactful tool for tackling street harassment.
STWTS started in Brooklyn in the fall of 2012. It is an on-going,
travelling series and will gradually include many cities and many women
participants.
Street harassment is a serious issue that affects women world wide. This
project takes women’s voices, and faces, and puts them in the street -
creating a bold presence for women in an environment where they are so
often made to feel uncomfortable and unsafe.
Thanks to my friend Barbara Jaspersen for forwarding this article by Arlene Goldbard to me, and I was so struck by what she had to say that I felt like sharing it here. Struck because that spirit of resignation is to be found in me as well, that inner virus she calls the “internalization of the oppressor”. Certainly confronting the proposed loss of ACCESS TUCSON, which has served the community for over 30 years, (see below) makes this article all the more relevant.
"I
focused especially on the way Corporation Nation has consigned
artists to a trivial and undernourished social role, instead of
understanding artists as an indicator species for social
well-being......................What does it mean that in many places
cultural allocations are less
than a hundredth of a percent of prison budgets? Who are we as a people?
What do we stand for? What do we want to be
known for: our stupendous ability to punish, or our vast creativity?"
This has been a strange time in my little world: I’ve been traveling
for work while my computer stayed home and lost its mind. I’m glad to
say that sanity (i.e., memory, software, and general order) has been
restored, and while I still have the sort of compulsive desire to tell
the tale that afflicts survivors of accidents, I will spare you most of
the saga. What both journeys—mine and the computer’s—have given me is the
opportunity to reflect on the workings of human minds, including my own.
In particular, I’ve had a close-up look at the desire to believe,
especially to believe the reassuring drone of those in authority.
Earlier this month, I gave a talk at Harvard that focused on some of
the key ideas in "The Culture of Possibility: Art, Artists & The
Future" (http://arlenegoldbard.com/books/two-new-books-by-arlene-goldbard/the-culture-of-possibility-art-artists-the-future/).
I focused especially on the way Corporation Nation has consigned
artists to a trivial and undernourished social role, instead of
understanding artists as an indicator species for social well-being akin
to the role oysters play as bio-monitors for marine environments. I
pointed out how arts advocacy has steadily failed (e.g., President Obama
asked Congress for $146 million for the National Endowment for Arts
[NEA] in the next budget, $8 million less than this year, when he should
have requested $440 million just to equal the spending power the agency
had 35 years ago). Yet advocates keep making the same weak arguments
and pretending that losing a little less than anticipated constitutes
victory. There’s an Emperor’s New Clothes flavor to the whole
enterprise, a tacit agreement to adjust to absurdity and go along with
the charade.***
After my talk, a student asked me what arguments should be made instead.
I pointed out that what we are actually spending our commonwealth on
seldom gets engaged in this conversation. What does it mean that we
spend more than two annual NEA budgets a day, seven days a week, on war?***
What does it mean that in many places cultural allocations are less
than a hundredth of a percent of prison budgets? I posed the questions
that ought to guide this debate: Who are we as a people? What do we stand for? What do we want to be
known for: our stupendous ability to punish, or our vast creativity?
The student nodded vigorously as I answered. I could see that she was
with me: that the curtains of default reality had parted, affording a
glimpse of the truths beneath the charade. And then something happened,
something I’d seen before: some students’ excited expressions began to
fade, shoulders slumped a little, breathing returned to normal.
“Realism” had set in. What I mean by “realism” is the self-ratifying
notion broadcast by every power elite: the message that the existing
order of things is so firmly entrenched, so well-funded, and so
effectively guarded that it is pointless to resist. Be realistic:
surrender!
This is the real obstacle we’re up against. The pull of “realism” is
felt in nearly every mind, even the minds of those whose lives are
devoted to righting injustice and expanding liberty. Paulo Freire called
it “internalization of the oppressor,” pointing out that when we hear
often and insistently enough that we are weak, that we should cede our
power to others who know better, we start to mistake that voice for our
own.
There is one skill that every power elite possesses, and that is
the ability to persuasively assert its own mighty rightness. But there
is one power that each of us possesses, and that is to cultivate the
ability to recognize and reject this propaganda. It takes awareness,
commitment, and choice to hack through false consciousness and begin to
see clearly. It takes all those capacities to recognize that the voice
of “realism” is generally propaganda for the existing order of power
(and powerlessness).
*** Remember that 59% of the national budget goes to the military, and the corporate interests that profit. The NEA, along with the Food Stamps administration, is not even 1%. Not much sustenance for inspiration, or hunger, with those patriarchal priorities.
*** My astirisks. Currently artists in Tucson are disgusted that the city of Tucson, although raising salaries once again, are proposing doing away with ACCESS TUCSON****, selling the building that has housed it, and ending the program that has enriched the community for over 30 years. I myself was able to produce and share a video presentation ("When the Word for World Was Mother"") through ACCESS in the late 80's. We keep losing things, one at a time. We keep becoming impoverished, and going along with agenda this author speaks of resignedly.
*****What is Access Tucson?
Access Tucson was established as an independent, non-profit,
membership based organization for the management of public access in
1984. Access Tucson provides the training and facilities for Tucsonans
to communicate with the community utilizing electronic media. Public
access producers provide the ideas, information, and diversity to create
the most visible part of our organization, the programming.
Access Tucson is funded by cable subscribers in the form of franchise
revenue fees to the City of Tucson, by corporate and individual
donations and fundraising efforts. Public access television is the only forum where individuals can
express their opinions and perspectives to the community through cable
television. Access television provides the community an important venue
for First Amendment rights, the right to free speech. Public access
television makes the use of electronic media possible for many groups
that are under represented, or not heard or seen at all in conventional
broadcast television.
Production classes.
Youth after-school programs
Access to production equipment.
Cablecast of programming produced locally or outside of Tucson.