Are You Lucky?

Posted by Unguided on October 27th, 2008 at 07:13 am.
Category: Criticism

There are few authors who can tackle the issue of coincidence or luck if you will, more striking than Paul Auster. In almost all of his novels the element of chance is ever present. But is it not the same in real life, too? You are born in one place and find all the good things, change the place of your birth to a few hundred kilometers to any direction and you are in deep shit.

Greenpeace had an amazing photo story about e-waste, titled Scraplife: E-waste in Pakistan, written and photographed by Robert Knoth. In June 2008 Greenpeace tracked a shipment of e-waste from Europe to its final resting place - Pakistan. This is the story of what happens to that e-waste and the people it affects. You might want to see and read what happens to those who are less fortunate than you are and take action to tell Philips to take back and recycle. You could have been born there.

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Meltdown in Nuclear Industry

Posted by Unguided on August 13th, 2008 at 07:40 am.
Category: Criticism

I have always been against nuclear energy and construction of reactors in Turkey, but my objection is based on cultural grounds rather than scientific reasons. We seem to be somewhat relaxed and can not be bothered with procedures, specifications, rules, policies, so and so forth. This attitude is a sort of survival skill in a troubled part of the world and help us overcome a lot of problems. However, combine this with nuclear energy, frankly speaking, the first thing I would do is run away, fast, very fast. I simply can not imagine Turks running and operating a nuclear site.

On the other hand, I have always assumed Finnish (had a few first-hand acquaintances) to be cool-minded but warm-blooded people. Compared to French who can be temperamental but still logical (maybe because of Descartes and Lagrange), I thought the Finnish-French combination would produce good results. If there were any people who could build a nuclear reactor, if that was the only choice, this would be the ideal partnership.

I can not tell how disappointed I am after reading the safety procedures are in disarray at Finland’s Olkiluoto 3 nuclear construction site at Greenpeace blog. The contractor, French company Areva, is not only 2-3 years behind schedule, 70% over the budget and experiencing 1,500 construction defects along with a damaging fire, but also failing to implement vital safety procedures in the construction of its prototype European Pressurized Water Reactor (EPR) in Olkiluoto, Finland. What is worse, the Finnish nuclear safety authority STUK, and the country’s electricity generator TVO have all been aware of these problems and yet the necessary vital safeguards have not been implemented.

If this does not prove what a dangerous proposition nuclear energy is, what does?

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Where is Our Lake, Dude?

Posted by Unguided on August 11th, 2008 at 10:16 am.
Category: Criticism

young and adult flamingos flying

They were the real travelers, the free spirits nature had kindly offered us. They crossed deserts, flew over mountains which few humans dared climb, passed through valleys, over forests sunlight could not penetrate.

They were expert sailors, could find their way without the aid of a compass or electronic equipment.

They knew how to ride the wind. The strong and the experienced positioned themselves at the tough spots so that the weak and the young could have an easy ride.

They fought with adverse winds, they challenged the unforgiving heat of the sun. Flying at an altitude only eagles could, they slowly approached their final destination, all the way from African deserts to Lake Aksehir, Turkey. They began their descent, the part they liked most: the show off. Like a woman aware of her beauty, they, too knew we would watch them with eyes of appreciation; queens of the migratory birds, the flamingos. The young were happy, they made it. And for that reason, it took a while to understand something was wrong, terribly wrong. The adults were silent, only the wind. Panicked, they looked at the adults flying next to them. But they did not find the usual “you’re doing fine” look. Adults were too busy staring down, staring at a place the young ones’ eyes could not see, yet.

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In Praise of Fire

Posted by Unguided on August 2nd, 2008 at 12:44 pm.
Category: Ueberthoughts

forests in serik and manavgat on fire

I have always had difficulty reading the writers of the South. Capote, McCullers, Williams… They all managed to reflect human soul so well that it was impossible not to feel depressed; the heat, the dust, and the humid air, hanging and covering you like an invisible veil. Like your own sweat.

Sweat.. Despite the northerly wind it clings to me still. On an ordinary day, I could have liked it. I could have, because it would have marked the beginning of summer, the favorite season of the idle, of Russell, of me.

But I did not. Watched the forests from Serik to Manavgat burn instead, regretting the Forest Love video of the previous post.

That’s why the Southern writers are so good. You hate them, yet they move you. Turning over the next page can be an agony, yet you feel you have to, to face the truth, to look inside you. Did you?

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ForestLove, A Greenpeace Campaign

Posted by Unguided on July 31st, 2008 at 03:01 pm.
Category: Events-News

last forest standing

On September 10, the EU will be voting on a vital law against illegal logging. ForestLove is a controversial campaign run by Greenpeace to push the EU’s vote in the right direction. Adoption of the legislation will ensure all timber products placed on the European market are from legal sources and well-managed forests. As the world’s biggest wood importer, Europe has a unique responsibility to help stop deforestation, illegal logging and its impacts on climate, biodiversity and forest communities.

Not only you can watch the video and help Greenpeace get this video to the top of the video viral charts, but you can actively take photos or videos to be submitted to Greenpeace. Greenpeace will edit materials submitted until the deadline of August 31 into a collaborative video that will show the EU commissioners just how much everyone loves the forests…

Watch the video and help promote it.

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