Archive for April 12, 2008

Climbers should get stipends for keeping the risk-taking gene pool alive

I was reading the National Geographic’s Adventure magazine for May 2008, which had a fantastic article on the legendary mountaineer Conrad Anker.

Conrad Anker

I found this wonderful thread at the end, which I thought captured my thoughts on climbing quite beautifully:

“What we do as certified risk takers….” The sentence trails off unfinished, but then Anker picks up the thread.

“Kids need to know that there are still some badasses out there, doing incredibly demanding things to their bodies. Most people are so risk-averse. The world’s full of couch potatoes. Hell, we climbers should get government stipends for keeping the risk-taking gene pool alive.”

I couldn’t have put it any better, and that has got to be the quote of the year!

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Bob, Baez & Britney: The Death of An Era

Yesterday, out of the blue, I popped a CD that had a collection of songs by Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.

Simply listening to their voices and their lyrics drove a shiver down my spine. I could literally feel myself standing there and it was beautiful, and quite moving.

In a way, they defined an era when artists actually cared for the world around them, and a culture where they stood for what they believed in. Baez’s voice is gorgeous, deep and her lyrics are from a time when people like her were willing to drive home their point at whatever cost. Dylan was no different, and he was a poet first, a poet who sang for the soul of the world.

When the CD got done, I turned on radio, where songs ranged from some meaningless rap (on women, booze and assorted nonsense) to unadulterated junk. I turned to some news channel that talked about the importance of Christians to be aggressive, while another one was saying how poor Britney Spears needed help for her idiocy.

In a way, it is an unfortunate turn of events. We’ve moved away from artists who cared about the world, such as Baez, Dylan and Lennon, to people like Spears who don’t give a damn about anything other than their own tantrums and fame.

I cannot see Britney Spears protesting against the War in Iraq, or joining the Olympic protests against China. Instead, I see her doing unbelievably immature things for the sake of attention. I see the death of an era of responsible global citizens and the emergence of immature, childish fame-hogs who care for nothing other than themselves, and sometimes, not even that.

But for the moment, listen to the song that beautifully captured a time that I’d have been proud to have been a part of.

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A Boom That Wasn’t

The New York Times has an excellent article on the state of the current US economy.

One of the key points that they bring up is that traditionally, boom and bust cycles result in higher purchasing power and better lifestyle to the people during the boom cycles. Unfortunately, this is not necessarily the case in the US.

For instance, at the end of the 2000 economic expansion, the median American family’s income was $61,000. In 2007, it was $60,500. If anything, the American middle class is not just stagnating — it is recessing, made worse by inflation and high gas prices.

Contrast this between the real median family income that quite literally doubled from the 1940s through the late 1970s. In the three decades since, it has barely risen by 25%.

One of the most critical problems facing our country today is education. The US is lagging far behind compared to the rest of the world, and despite faulty programs like “No Child Left Behind” has one of the lowest graduation rates among developed countries.. Another one is public infrastructure — a lot of money that’s currently spent is on useless pet projects, while the larger infrastructure needs aren’t being met. And of course, there is the issue of health care and the fact that a significant portion of Americans cannot afford to take care of themselves.

Finally, there is the age old issue of tax cuts which are supposedly favorable to the higher-income bracket groups versus the lower-income bracket groups (this is the one point that I disagree on).

But either way, it is a good point, and a very insightful one in a very sad way.

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