Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Today's Apocalypse Sign: Back To The Future




In honor of my 400th post I am reposting my very first post on this blog from January 16th, 2010. (How about that for overuse of the word "post") I got the inspiration for this from a surprising comment left by Arlee Bird on that post just today (6/1/12). At that time I had no readers, no direction, and no idea about this thing called blogging. Yes I knew what a blog was and that there were millions of them out there but the actual nuts and bolts were foreign to me.

 

To this day I cannot tell you why I chose Apocalypse Now as my blog name. It is one of my favorite movies for sure but beyond that... To say that whatever my original idea was and where I am today, well, there are probably miles of difference. It was truly a dive in - sink or swim type of thing. I was either going to get bored and never have any readers and quit or I would achieve a reason to continue to WANT to post.

Well fortunately that reason came to pass. Due to all of YOU who choose to spend some amount of your precious time  humoring me. And sometimes letting me know your thoughts and opinions in the comments.  Pat, you being my first follower and loyal reader, I have come to believe that beyond our online friendship we could truly have a great time over a couple cold beers and some story telling.  

Alex, Jesse...you two weren't far behind Pat in coming aboard. I think sitting around a table with you and Pat would be quite a get together. Pat's pictures and travels and war stories...Alex's writing and music/movie knowledge...Jesse your "out there" way of thinking, all fascinating stuff to me.

For all those who came after, this following post has only one comment (Lee's on 6/1/12). So even though the subject matter is 2 1/2 years old, I feel the sentiment is just as real today. Plug in any recent disaster it reads the same for me. I hope you enjoy the beginnings of this web adventure I have joined... thanks for reading!
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January 16th, 2010 (shortly after the new year's disaster in Haiti)



With the disaster in Haiti monopolizing the news for the last week, I thought it time to reflect on what is really a tragedy. I am speaking of course about the relief efforts. Oh, don't get me wrong, I believe that the world (and the US specifically) is swiftly coming to the aid of one of the poorest countries in the western world. What I am concerned about is the manner in which the US relief is being funded.

Before getting into the full roll here, I would like to set the playing field.

1. Haiti is a very poor country. Infrastructure is barely above primitive man in many areas. Unsanitary conditions, tin shacks, unpaved roads and THEN a 7.0 earthquake. Nothing could be more devastating.


2. Hundreds of thousands of people, many of them women and children, are now homeless. Many are injured and some at risk for amputation of arms or legs. The streets of Port Au Prince are literally bedrooms, hospital rooms, and morgues. People are being flown out to moored ships for surgery.


3. With almost 2 million people crammed into a small area of land bordered by ocean and only one barely paved road to the Dominican Republic on the other side of the island, the risk of widespread disease could rise to epidemic levels in short order...especially with the temperature and humidity in the area creating a fertile breeding ground along with the limited sanitation.


4. So much relief is coming in so fast there is no place to handle it all. Planes are circling the small airport for hours. Soon the airport will be so crowded with relief planes, supplies, and personnel there will be no room for any more planes to land. Supplies being trucked from the Dominican Republic are on the road for almost 10 hours to reach P-A-P. In the coming days these caravans could be subject to hijackings by desperate Haitians.


5. There appears to be no coordinated effort of the various factions of the relief efforts so there is just a lot of action. In the early days this may suffice but shortly chaos will start creeping in.

I am sure many additional observations could be made but I will stop at 5.

Ever since Hurricane Katrina and the relief debacle that followed, the US has been quick on the trigger whenever catastrophic events have taken place. First the tsunami halfway around the world and now the Haitian earthquake. Both possible signs the apocalypse could be upon us.

The Myans may have it right about 2012.

Here is the motivation for this blog and for this first post.

Getting money to agencies that need it and getting supplies bought with said money to those who ultimately need it.

First for donations...there are many who are asking for donations, some like the Red Cross are certainly trustworthy to donate to...others are complete scams. As always the worst in times brings out the worst in human nature. Many people have already been scammed by Haitian relief frauds.

The texting to 90999 goes somewhere and adds $10 to your phone bill and then the money goes somewhere...I've seen lots of ads for this but cannot for the life of me remember the agency THIS money is going to. Stick with the Red Cross if you want to help and be sure your donation will really help.

Second, I want to explore what to me is always the obvious in these situations. Why couldn't the top 100 richest people on the face of the earth donate $10 million each? This would be an immediate windfall of $1 billion in the coffers to provide any damn thing needed right now and the short-term future.

Further more, put these same people in a room to decide on a board of directors to oversee the management of this money in the relief effort. They are all shrewd business men of some sort and know how to prudently spend money to get the maximum effect. Cut the red tape, get shit done, and move this thing along at light speed...that would be their mantra.

Besides the human factor that the relief efforts must urgently address, someone has to start addressing the rebuilding that will certainly have to take place. With the potential of 10's of thousands of bodies buried beneath the rubble and the risk of all sorts of disease sprouting up, this group can begin the task of coordinating the shipments of heavy machinery (many of them have friends in construction and should be able to get either donations of equipment or great deals on the purchase) and other items required for what will surely be a massive and long-lasting rebuilding effort. If it actually gets started.

I don't want to attempt to layout a whole plan here, but you get the idea. By God those who have, need to help! They should be ashamed to just sit back and let the ones who can afford it least, shoulder the load. I watched a show the other night on TV and one of the actor's lines stuck with me. When an FBI agent was using a big-time arms dealer to help him catch a not so nice arms dealer, he asked him, "How much money does one man need? It's about doing the right thing."

I say Amen twice to that. Mr Gates, Mr Buffett, and yes even you Mr Cuban and all the others on the Top 100 Richest list...you've worked hard for what you have earned, I say "How much money does one man need? It's about doing the right thing." And Bill...let's be honest, you could and probably should pony up the billion by yourself. Then Warren wouldn't want to be outdone so maybe we start a humanitarian tsunami...what a thought.

I will leave you with this...NASA is selling two space shuttles for the discounted price of $28 million each. They have 20 bidders lined up so far. I say let those 20 bidders put their $28 million each to better use...that would be $560 million dollars to go to the relief efforts. Ya see, getting 3 or 4 billion dollars pulled together in short order is no real trick at all.

And the bonus...we are not relying on or asking ordinary everyday people who barely have enough to live on, lost their home, have been downsized, or are just simply struggling in today's economy to donate what little they are gladly donating to help people in another country to try and survive.

Because right now, as it is, if not them then who?

19 comments:

SueH said...

Very well said, Chuck!
I heartily agree!

The disgustingly rich will leave this life as they arrived, naked and penniless, so they might as well make an effort to put their wealth to good use.....and there lies the rub! It's the 'I'm alright, Jack' brigade who cling to their money because that's what defines them - how pathetic.

But - we CAN all do our bit: donations to responsible Aid agencies (do your homework, the internet has plenty of information to help you suss out the the good from the bad); physically supporting the chosen agencies either by on-the-ground support or fundraising (garage sales can bring in welcome funds...!); talking about the issues and keeping them in the national concience (like this blog post - well done again, Chuck!)

I have a passion about the fact that not everyone on this planet has the opportunity to drink safe, clean water - yet I can just turn on a tap and fill a glass.

Well, I can't dig wells in Africa (for instance) but I'm knitting blankets for OXFAM (g00gle it, if you're not familiar) They don't just supply relief aid - these blankets are sold at pop-concerts, etc, (for a decent price, too!) to raise more cash for aid projects.

Think about your talents - what can YOU do?

And read the Starfish tale - makes you think!

(sorry Chuck, didn't mean to rant...!)

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

How much money does one man need? I wonder about that whenever I see an athlete get a ten million dollars a year contract. After the million dollar home and million dollar car (a Bugatti, of course!) what else do you need? Of course, making that kind of money mean you can help more people.
You're right about the rich men coming up with a good plan. They obviously understand business!
Glad you reposted this. Will always keep coming back, Chuck!

Unknown said...

Awesome look back. I was always wondering why your blog was titled 'apocalypse now' but it's all clear. What a sad time that was.

Pat Tillett said...

Yep! It's been quite a while now Chuck! Thanks for the mention and I'm always ready for that cold beer or (several). I also agree about Alex and Jesse.
Now those Mayans, that's another story!
Isn't it interesting that the situation in Haiti is still a giant Cluster F***!

Chuck said...

Sue: That is the most impressive comment I have ever read. I am proud of your blankets. The starfish story was brilliant and right on target. Feel free to rant as long as you like.

Alex: I admire Donald Driver, star receiver for the Packers. He took way less money to play for a team he is passionate about. He will played a limited situational role. He wants to end his career as a Packer and he accepts that. He wants to help the new guys coming into the league and he wants to contribute to another Super Bowl. Last year was so crushing in January, he just wants to play. That is the spirit in sports that is lost in today's game. And I hate it.

Clarissa: Thanks. And sorry about the misspelled name yesterday!

Pat: Good times. There is no solution to Haiti. When is the last time you have heard anything about the entire mess there? It's not headline news anymore so where are the Clooneys and Travoltas now? It is a human tragedy.

Chiz said...

Congrats on the 400th post!

I know it's ignorant for me to say since I'm not wealthy, but if I was sitting on billions of dollars, I would donate absurd amounts of it. All I care about is having enough money to not have to work and live in a moderately small house. I'm pretty sure I can rest easy on 5 million dollars. What's the point of a mansion if you're not going to set foot in 80% of it? Bah, then again, I'm not rich so I don't know how I'd act.

Anonymous said...

As relevant as ever, Chuck. But as far as the Mayans go, did they know about leap year? =] Congratulations on 400 posts!

Chuck said...

Chiz: Thanks. I guess none of us is sure what we'd do but I am pretty sure I would be donating loads quickly so I wouldn't have time to get used to having it and thinking about what to do with it. That is where most rich people run into a problem...it's like their money is their kid, or a pet.

Milo: Thanks, 400 posts seems like an awful lot of drivel :) I have read pro and con arguments regarding what I term "the Leap Year Theory". I suspect their calculations encompassed the correct time. WE had to invent Leap Year to correct OUR calendar.

Hootin Anni said...

From the comedic side of me...you mentioned your blog title....I am sure one of your favorite lines [mine too, tho I'm not sure this early in the morning if my wording is correct...] is: I love the smell of napalm in the morning.

Okay, now that I got that off my chest ---ahem--- your post with no comments was very MUCH worth a repeat!!! Money is the root of all evil...the rich seem to want to take it with them when they 'go'. Your thoughts were right on!! And I loved your expression: Humanitarian Tsunami.

I like how you think. That's why I continue to return here when I can. I'm glad you stuck with the blogging and didn't quit. Congratulations on your 400.



ON THE WINGS OF A DOVE

Chuck said...

Anni: " It smells like....victory!" Great line from that movie. I am glad you enjoyed my first post and agreed with my thinking. And if I had not continued blogging...how could I ever have met you and enjoyed myself at your site? Thanks Anni.

Nancy Thompson said...

Not sure how much has changed there in the last 2-1/2 years. Certainly is sad. But congrats on your 400th post. WOW! 400 posts! Can't imagine. Hope you'll be around for another 400. Cheers!

The Man-Cave said...

Congrats on becoming Mr. 400 brutha! Kepp up the good work Chuck and if there is an apocalypse in December, I hope to spend it with you!

Shannon Lawrence said...

I'm so glad you continued to post after that first one. A humanitarian tsunami would be wonderful! Spot on with the lack of organization and ability to handle what was coming in. People have to donate more than money and items, but also time and organization. I'd love to see one of these billionaires pack up a personal plane with professionals, such as doctors, construction experts, etc. People who could go in and facilitate healing, rebuilding, distribution, you name it. That would be valuable. HAPPY 400!

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

I remember the first post I read here. It was about students jumping off a bridge. The absurdity of why the problem wasn't being solved has remained my image of what this blog is about.

Chuck said...

Nancy: Sad is an understatment for sure. Yeah, 400 is a really big number when I take a minute to think about it. Thanks.

Geof: Thank sman! Hey if we are together on the Big Day of the apocalypse...you bring some of that micro-brew, umkay??

Shannon: Yeah there has to be a better way than what usually happens in these events...a year later and you are not hearing about the Japanese tsunami any more either. Thanks on the 400!

Lucy: For you I am going to repost that in a week or so while I am on vacation. That was a good one.

Kranky Granny said...

Chuck, When I find a blog I like I always go back and read the first few post. I like to understand how it got started, what the goals were and how the blog evolved over time.

So I had already read this first post. I enjoyed it as much this second time around.

If you knew my family you would understand what I am about to say. I learned a long time ago that the safest and sanest route for me was to make it my cardinal rule not to ever get into a discussion on either religion or politics. So while I may read, and while I may agree (or disagree) you will never know because I do not comment on those subjects. EVER.

My lack of comments dose not mean that I am not lurking in the background.

Arlee Bird said...

It pays to repost earlier bits I guess. You certainly got a better response this time around.
Your blog name is what drew me here initially since Apocalypse Now is also one of my favorite movies. It kind of vies with movies by Fellini depending on what I've watched most recently. If Fellini had made surrealistic war movies they would have probably looked like Apocalypse Now.


Lee
A Faraway View

Chuck said...

Thanks Rita!

Lee: I figured that periodically I would repost some earlier work just to stir the pot.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Chuck .. rather late in the day - yet I agree with you re donations etc - there are way too many scams out there.

It's good you hung around and worked out what's what in the blogging world - certainly I had no idea where I was going - just knew I didn't want to be negative re illness (my mother's strokes) ... and enjoyed learning - so that's the direction I went in ..

Cheers Hilary

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