Monday, November 24, 2014

Article citations for Interdisciplinary Project


Article Citations

 

 

Smith, John. (Aug. 2011). “Religion and Society.” ProperCitations. Retrieved October. 2014 from http://ProperCitations.com/Citing_Sources.html

 

 

Parr, Sharon. (June 2010). “Religion and Society.” ProperCitations. Retrieved October 2014 from:


 

 

Keister, Lisa. (November 2011). “Faith and Money: How Religion Contributes to Wealth and Poverty.” P Retrieved October 2014 from:


 

 

 

Casati, David. (October 2014). “Of Virtue and Vice, and a Vatican Priest.” . Retrieved October. 2014 from:


 

 

 

Matthews, Dylan. (Aug. 2011). “You Give religions More than 82.5 billion a year.” Retrieved October. 2014 from:


 

 

Money.co.uk. (undated). “Religion and Society.”  Retrieved  October. 2014 from:


 

 

 

Murray, Reverend Andrew. (Aug. 2009). “.Money: Though for God’s Stewards” Retrieved  October. 2014 from:


 

 

 

Pagna, Jack. (October 2014). “The Corruption of our Churches.” Retrieved 3 October. 2014 from: Smith, John. (Aug. 2011). “Religion and Society.” ProperCitations. Retrieved 3 Oct. 2011 from:


 

 

 

Williams. Thomas. (Aug. 2011). “Corruption is a Greater Evil than Sin.” Retrieved October. 2014 from:


 

 

 

 

Young Boy Dies With Fake Gun




This Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014 photo of a BB gun taken from a 12-year old shot by Cleveland police is shown. A 12-year-old boy shot by police after apparently grabbing what turned out to be a replica gun died from his wounds Sunday, a day after officers responded to an emergency call about a someone waving a "probably fake" gun at a playground. One officer fired twice after the boy pulled the fake weapon, which was lacking the orange safety indicator usually found on the muzzle, from his waistband but had not pointed it at police, Deputy Chief Ed Tomba said. (AP Photo/The Plain Dealer, Cory Schaffer)




MY COMMENTS***************************************************************


I feel for this boys parents and my first thought is, with all the gun shootings and violence around, why would they, if they did, let him play with a gun, toy or not? Yes, he was at a playground and yes, someone did report that "someone" was playing with a possible fake gun, but the police were not told this, supposedly, and took drastic action when they arrived at the scene.




.....officers responded to an emergency call about a someone waving a "probably fake" gun at a playground.....




 When will we truly examine the impact that guns have on our society will never be known. Anyone that seems to try will no doubt be held back by organizations like the NRA. You can be that incidents like there will continue and that there will be many more deaths. Our philosophy, lots of which we learned in Foundations of Inquiry class, might not prepare us for the loss of loved ones, but It sure opened the door to many opinions out there.


tamirrice112314.jpg

Thursday, November 20, 2014

The Team Of Life









MY COMMENTS***********************************************************


We did a good job in bringing up "The Facts of Life", so to speak. I think we definitely made very interesting reaches into our topic and showed proper analysis. I would have liked to go more into views and opinions but then our report would have been drowned in every opinion on the earth. So many of us have a different opinion on what life is that the main subject would be lost.












Life Quotes Tumblrshort-life-quotes-tumblr










Life is what it is and many times you cannot argue about it. The Sociology and Psychology disciplines that we study in class cannot cover the total forest, only a few plants. It is an individual feeling and aspect that only the life follower can travel. I could not match someone else's experience and he or she could not match mine. We only go as far as we can go and then try to understand others and their journey.


Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Man And His Wisdom?

What exactly is <b>Philosophy</b>?










MY COMMENTS**********************************************************


When I first saw this image I thought to myself, What is man and what will he end up doing? Where are we in this messed up world and will we survive to see another generation? Sometimes, sitting back and reading the New York times I see nothing but war, scandal, death and misery and I wonder where will it all end. Philosophy, as we have discussed it in class seems to lead us to higher levels of thinking and experience whereas reality sends us down a dark path. Individually we need to think and be ourselves but when we group together, sometimes all hell breaks loose. Philosophy, such as learned in Foundations of Inquiry class, is one of our disciplines which means Love of wisdom, not violence.


















I will not take sides on who is right and who is wrong.






... to enjoy public <b>philosophy</b>, join us at one of our <b>Philosophy</b> Cafes









  Another American hostage has been executed by ISIS or whatever group claims there injustices have been violated. Once again American policies are questioned and we have to deal with another possible bombing or drone attack which will probably end up killing once again some innocent people who just happen to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. then someone else will take an action which will irritate someone else and another attack, such as the Jerusalem one on November 17. They will respond which means the other side will respond to their response and on and on and on. I will not take sides on who is right and who is wrong. I will just say give me a spot on this international space station so I can get away just like all the rich and powerful who will be there as well. I am sure some of they are probably responsible for some of the bad going on, but who cares.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Damon Horowitz-Philosophy In Prison




















MY COMMENTS******************************************************************




I believe that this video shows the mistakes one can make in life. One single wrong decision and bam, you are on a wrong course to a bad place. This Tony that Damon Horowitz speaks of is in prison for shooting a gang member and is getting a visit from Damon who is there speaking to inmates about Philosophy.


Tony is not altogether lost. he does complete a paper on the subject of Philosophy, which connects to our list of disciplines in the way we think. Tony now begins to question many of the things in his life and through his report shows that he is knowledgeable and has a free mind, even though his body is in prison.








......shows that he is knowledgeable and has a free mind


Of course, Tony must pay for what he has done. It is a shame that he learns certain things "on  the inside" rather than on his own. I do get the feeling that he will be a "one timer" and that his experiences will lead to him being released and living a better life. One bad decision in robbing a gang member after he supposedly robbed him will lead him and many others to more thought and contemplation. If he had this additional skill earlier he would not have been in trouble or would have been able to disassociate with the bad things in his life.






Thursday, November 13, 2014

Philosophy - A Guide to Happiness: Socrates on Self-Confidence

Philosophy - A Guide to Happiness: Socrates on Self-Confidence  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVA8jX9KQcE

Socrates Now


MY COMMENTS****************************************************************





This is an interesting video shown in class which starting out has Alain De Botton riding a motor bike through the city of Greece. He talks of Socrates and Philosophy, being one of our disciplines we are studying, and how he questions many of Socrates habits and successes, among other things. I must admit that I was surprised that he would bring up many of Socrates' odd behaviors in his life, such as the great Socrates refusing to wear sandals and having big eyes and such, but he does make good points in the interview that he conducts with a man named Andrew Miller and the company British Biotech and his loan stance against his company and his peers.

Going against others in any circumstance is a brave thing, especially if you have no support from anyone. Many people, due to fear, go with the group. They will "follow the sheep" or be led by others. Socrates led a similar life, questioning and evaluating everything. Quite brave, when you thing about it. It was the reason why he was executed but he still stated his views and opinions, even when facing death. That makes him stand alone in my book. Very few have even talked about their views publicly, such as the moderator of this video asks when walking through Greece asking peoples views. It is hard sometimes to separate yourself from a crowd and stand up for something.


Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Sam Berns, 17, Public Face of a Rare Illness, Is Dead


Photo
Credit Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images
Sam Berns, a Massachusetts high school junior whose life with the illness progeria was the subject of a documentary film recently shortlisted for an Academy Award, died on Friday in Boston. He was 17.
His death, from complications of the disease, was announced by the Progeria Research Foundation, which Sam’s parents, both physicians, established in 1999.
Extremely rare — it affects one in four million to one in eight million births — progeria is a genetic disorder resulting in rapid premature aging. Only a few hundred people have the disease, whose hallmarks include hair loss, stunted growth, joint deterioration and cardiac problems.
Though the gene that causes progeria was isolated in 2003 by a research team that included Sam’s mother, there is still no cure. Patients live, on average, to the age of 13, typically dying of heart attacks or strokes.
The feature-length documentary “Life According to Sam,” directed by Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine, was released last year. They won an Oscar for their 2012 short documentary “Inocente,” about a homeless teenager.
“Life According to Sam” has been shown at film festivals, including Sundance, and it was broadcast on HBO in October. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said it is among 15 documentaries considered for Oscar nominations.
Through the film, through a profile in The New York Times Magazine in 2005 and through a talk he gave last year at a TEDx conference (a community-based incarnation of the TED talks) that gained wide currency on the Internet, Sam became progeria’s best-known public face.
“Life According to Sam” opens when its subject, who lived in Foxborough, is 13 and follows him for three years. He agreed to participate on one condition, which he sets forth firmly in the film: “I didn’t put myself in front of you to have you feel bad for me,” he says. “You don’t need to feel bad for me. Because I want you to get to know me. This is my life.”
Diminutive and bespectacled, Sam was a riot of enthusiasms: for math and science, comic books, scouting (he was an Eagle Scout), playing the drums and Boston-area sports teams.
In his TEDx talk, he spoke of his heart’s desire: to play the snare drum with the Foxborough High School marching band. The trouble was that the drum and its harness weighed 40 pounds. Sam weighed 50 pounds. His parents engaged an engineer to develop an apparatus weighing just six pounds. Sam marched.
The only child of Dr. Scott Berns, a pediatrician, and Dr. Leslie Gordon, then a pediatric intern, Sampson Gordon Berns was born in Providence, R.I., on Oct. 23, 1996. He received a diagnosis of progeria shortly before his second birthday.
Finding little medical literature about progeria, his parents, with Dr. Gordon’s sister Audrey Gordon, started the research foundation. As a result of its work, clinical trials of a drug, lonafarnib, which appears to ameliorate some effects of progeria, began in 2007. Though preliminary results are considered encouraging, the drug does not constitute a cure.
Besides his parents, Sam’s survivors include his grandparents, Alice and Lewis Berns and Barbara and Burt Gordon.
At his death, Sam had been planning to apply to college, where he hoped to study genetics or cell biology.
“No matter what I choose to become, I believe that I can change the world,” he said in his TEDx talk last year. “And as I’m striving to change the world, I will be happy.”
 
MY COMMENTS****************************************************************
 
I have seen very few individuals with a super strength of character and determination. When Professor Klotz showed his video in class I thought to my self "what a dynamic person" who will keep going and never stop dreaming of what he wants, where he will go, and what he will do. I like people like that, who constantly keep going. It was a shame that when I finally looked him up online that he had passed away due to his condition. What a shame.
 
 
Besides liking it when the good guys win, he was a general well loved soul who kept to his beliefs and showed his true heart. He is a symbol of the Sociology discipline that we study in class. I only saw him in the video once but the link to it is above and you are welcome to freely click on it to get a piece of what he stood for.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Interdisciplinary Article Summation


Sekou Williams

FCIQ 101

Professor Ann Marie Klotz

Interdisciplinary Project Article Summation

Topic : Money and Religion and Corruption Within

 

Central Question:

 

The central question to my topic of Money and Religion and Corruption Within focuses on religions around the world and the effect that money may have on it. Does money corrupt religion? Does it just corrupt the people involved? Have our churches been assaulted all these years by a force that can weaken if not decimate the proper values of churches?  Over the years the church has changed, especially during these modern times, and much of it not really for the better. Current politics, financial hardships and such, have definitely had an effect on all religious organizations. These are some of the questions that I will be dealing with in my topic.

 

 

My stance:

 

I have believed mostly in Christianity all my life and I have seen and read news articles, radio reports and television shows that have asked the above question many times. I feel that my stance is correct and that the religions around the world are basically “under attack” when it comes to dealing with money, which is a necessity. We are all human and make mistakes, even those that govern the church. In any country or nation, the church is supposed to be a safe haven from political, economic and religious attacks. We are to feel safe at our center of belief and praise. “God” is her to guard us and protect us and if that situation changes due to any reason we will want to know why the church failed. In this summation I will show that the church is a power which has, in certain times and situations, was weak and has lost some of its respect.

 

Supporting arguments/articles:

 

I have gathered several articles from newspaper and magazines, most of which are peer reviewed, which deal with my argument that the church has, in many cases, lost its trust with its people and become corrupt. The first one is called Religion and Society by Sharon Parr. It explains how over the years the church has changed in much of its diversity between religious practices, especially after the baby boomer generation in the 1960’s.  Its influence and its followers have dealt with the changing world and their place in it. Spirituality as already complex and does not hold the same influence previously held and observed in society. When money comes into play, decisions necessary to the survival of the church must be more open, reasoned and handled with more care and thought. The mere appearance of improper dealings, whether buying from a local vendor, or which people in the church to help, may have repercussions that may bring down a church.

My second article, by Lisa Keister, “Faith and Money: how religion contributes to wealth and poverty,”, states that a growing body of research provides strong evidence that religion affects important economic outcomes for Americans, such as in education, income and work. She states in her article how, depending on your faith, how religion can directly influence many things among its followers. Upward mobility, work and occupations, indebtedness, home ownership and many other aspects including the flow of money from and to the church.  Apparently, there is a difference in power and stance of many churches, from Catholic, Protestant, Jews, Mormons and even subdivisions of churches. White Catholics, Black Catholics and Hispanic Catholics may each vary on their spending and associations with the church. One group may give more, spend more of the churches money, or receive monies that are given to the church as donations or for other reasons. The “all powerful church”, in certain cases, decides hopefully what will happen to these funds. The people following these churches, may definitely be a factor in the process as well.

 

“Of Virtue and Vice, and a Vatican Priest” by David Casati, tells of a very modern situation involving the Vatican and corruption within the Catholic Church. A trusted Monsignor, who had the honored position of being a top accountant at the Vatican office and managed the Holy See’s real estate and investments, was arrested. He is currently on trial, accused of money laundering and trying to smuggle over 26 million from Switzerland to Italy in a private plane, even with the help of an Italian secret Service agent. This particular person, Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, whose own personal wealth totals over 8.2 million, was paid by the church roughly 41,000 a year to manage Vatican funds. He abused his position, and used funds to maintain illegal dealings.  One statement Quoted from the Monsignor states he felt as if he was “Robin Hood” and took from the rich to give to the poor. This article goes on to state that this is not the first time well trusted people within the church have pilfered or robbed the Vatican. It has gone on for years. The present Pope has already responded to this and other allegations by reformatting the church and its banking dealings, lessening the amounts in certain cases and cutting down on the numerous accounts the church holds.

 

 

Dylan Matthews who wrote the article “You Give religions More than 82.5 billion a year” focuses on many religions and churches that a person might see on Sunday morning television.  Hundreds of programs that have been in existence for decades and have many true believers seem to have more capital than established religions on this planet for centuries. The writer of this article asks the question that if these churches and synagogues, mosques and the like lost their tax privileges, how much tax revenue they would generate. We have all heard scandals around these televangelists and know they make fortunes, but can this be a factor in what churches around the globe are dealing with? Organizations making billions and falling short of their common core beliefs? Losing touch with their faith for the comforts available due to their available flow of cash? A study was done and many of the churches here in America have over an estimated $600 billion in property scattered across the 50 states.

 

A very good article entitled ”The Business of Religion” by the money.co.uk team has taken a good approach to modern day churches and institutions by breaking down the finances of many of the religions and groups we have known around the world. It starts off by saying that money and religion is a grey area fraught with conspiracy and scandal. Some of the wealthiest organizations on the planet are religious or religious movements, ancient and modern, but their followers are the poorest, leading one to think where is all the money gone.

The article further goes on to show some of the vast wealth collected by these organizations, such as Scientology, which claims to have over 8 million followers worldwide and Hundreds of millions of dollars in assets. Many famous people have joined them but most of their members are very poor. The largest church the article mentions is, of course, the biggest. The Catholic Church has supposedly over 1.81 billion members across the world and its scandals are well known. The main point of this article is that organizations with huge amounts of money seem more geared to problems with their finances that their beliefs. Some with groups like Scientology have questions on both aspects.

 

Opposing stance:

 

The stance against my argument shows that the church, religious groups, and organizations have always fought against corruption and that this is something they have dealt with for years. It is an attack against the church that have may “shaken” things up a bit, but the church is strong and has dealt with worse over centuries of existence, in many cases. The power of belief, helping citizens of many countries and supporting generations cannot be defeated just by a few attempts by the weak, the greedy or corrupt people can bring a church down.

 

Opposing Arguments/articles

 

“Money: Though for God’s Stewards”, by Reverend Andrew Murray, will focus on the sanctity of the church. He writes that in the world of money there is a standard of value and that it is difficult to express all that money means. It can be a blessing or it can be a curse. Even in the kingdom of heaven one is judged by the money he has, how he obtained it and uses it are factors as well. Money can be tempting but the church must manage it and not fall to temptation. It is to be sacrificed to God for the good of the church and man and the church must be strengthened by the way they deal with money. As much as money is spent on self,” God may help the soul in the victory that overcomes the world and the flesh.” This is an important statement he makes in showing the church is powerful and must make right with what they collect, raise and supply the people they support with. Every effort must be made to resist temptation and the few who fall in the cracks will not bring the church down. It is strong, in this case his church and is here to help the people.

 

 

There is an interesting point in the article “The Corruption of our Churches” by Jackie Patna. It brings about the church and its ongoing involvement with the government or different governments. For centuries, the church in many ways had to follow government dictates, pay taxes or follow doctrines to survive. In order to help the people that follow that particular religion, the church had to go along with any scenario, even if it means breaking with the churches own rules to exist.  Those in power may not act in our favor and we sometimes must “stand up to the system” in order to deal with survival. Many times it is the government in control and religion is given a second standing. Additionally, people in power in the church may give “order” to the situation in order to keep the peace. A follower may not know it, but the church basically saved his or her life. By adapting to their environment, the church exists to save the people.

 

My third peer reviewed article in my opposing stance is by Mara Einstein which is called “In Brands of Faith”. She deals with the marketing of religion in the twenty first century and how it can affect and interact with modern society. According to her and the American Marketing Association, marketing can be described as the process of planning and executing the concept, planning and pricing and promotion of ideas, goods and services to create exchanges that satisfies individual and organizational objectives.  The marketing of religion has gone on since before the printing press. The church, institution or religion is trying to reach the people in order to help them get closer to god. This is a noble goal and can only be questioned if there is something wrong with which the marketing may be deployed. Not only can money can corrupt, but the marketing to the people as well. Truth in advertising is a concept that has been bantered about for years, but can we find which truth in which religion? This is a subject which may not be able to be answered satisfactorily. A church must survive with members. The church must let the members know in certain cases they exist, and “marketing” must be fair, especially if they are marketing just to get the patrons money. Marketing is a business and the church does in many ways market it well.

 

This fourth article, “Corruptions Is a Greater Evil that Sin”, shows how the Pope and other leaders have been fighting back for many years in dealing with corruption and what has been going on with financial problems within their organizations. It has been governments and banks over the years that the church has dealt with that have in fact allowed corruption to continue concerning the church. Government in many cases have been told or found that the banks knew of fraud, corruption and greed against the church and basically have turned a blind eye to what was happening. Even the President of the New York Federal Reserve has repeatedly stated that bankers must improve their ethics. No one seems to be listening and the church can only do its part in monitoring its financial dealings. The church, like many other organizations must keep its money in banks. Too much cash around may lead to the very thing that churches want to avoid, which is scandal. Additional laws and regulations have been put in place to stop the attacks on the church monies, and many religious groups have taken similar actions to ensure their wellbeing. In fact, as this article states, the bible asks us to stand up and do justice to anyone who would do injustice or oppress the people. There is even a cartoon at the beginning of the article showing Jesus driving the money changers out of the temple with a modern day interpretation. Instead of old world moneychangers, they show people from Barclays, Citibank and JP Morgan chase.

 

 

 

Connection to two or more disciplines:

The two connections to our Foundations of Inquiry class disciplines are political Science and Sociology. I have clearly defined that my topic. Money and Religion and Corruption Within has shown a definite connection to political science, being a social science that studies the state, nation government and politics of government. In many ways the government has involved itself with the church and what may or may not go on with church dealings. There are underlying facts and connections between the church and whatever government it associates with. Both deal with the people under its realm, or “jurisdiction, if you will. Both are supposed to have a relationship with the people and both the church and government have a control over what happens. 

 

Also, Sociology plays a factor in this topic as well. The academic study of social behavior tells us that various methods of beliefs and how we connect ourselves to our society and class and structure forms many of our beliefs and customs. Subject matters range from one individual to many people involved in our region, area countries and interactions with each other.  Even Psychology, the way we think is connected in this topic of religion. How we believe and what we believe is a definite connection.

 

 

Conclusion:

 

I believe that my topic may be a little touchy and cause some insult to people, but in the end perhaps it may strengthen their belief and help clear out any doubt that money, or the love of it, is the root of all evil. The church has weakened in many years, its population has shrunken and more and more scandals will be shown. Only by strengthening its resolve, the church must more than ever fight to keep its people, its trust and its use of money proper and whole. There is a constant and continuing problem and the churches, religious institutions, and groups must fend off what will be an ongoing fight. One side may state that the church has constantly fought against corruption and that governments, banks and greed alone are the cause of monetary loss. Other articles I have submitted here deal with churches “covering up” many situations and putting them under the proverbial rug, allowing the corruption to continue. In certain cases the organization itself may be questionable, Like Scientology.

 

In any case, modern day leaders like the Pope have put in place procedures to stop banks, criminals, and even unfortunately its own members, from pilfering. Certain groups have monitored these religions to see where the money goes, does it go to the people, how much is there, or is there questionable ethics involved in the church practices themselves? One cannot truly say with one church, for this problem involves many churches, many people and many governments. I feel, though, we can find a piece of the answer in my Interdisciplinary report.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

WHY PRIVACY MATTERS










MY COMMENTS*****************************************************************


I know that I need a little alone time in life, to think, to plan, to contemplate, etc. This video, connected to the Sociology and Critical Thinking disciplines, is the definite proof I need that even sitting alone I am not alone and will probably never will be. Whether I am on the internet, watching television or perhaps listening to the radio someone may be watching, and for what?


... to remember that world-class <b>inquiry</b> precedes world-class advocacy




Years ago in the nineties there was a very interesting television show on called "The X-Files", starring David Duchovny. It was a show based on science fiction, science fact, and government corruption. All the topics melded well together and one of the constant themes was that the government, yes, U.S. Government, spied on its people, celebrities, athletes, etc. I was not naïve, for I know they spied on many people, even Martin Luther King, but I did not know how bad it had become until a Mr. Snowden came along last year. As Glenn Greenwald stated in this video, nothing is sacred. we live in a dangerous time where friend and enemy look at each other, and record the goings on.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Chris Rock and Guns

http://blip.tv/TjzxPtmfvAVY/saturday-night-live-chris-rock-monologue-7097397
Click on the link above for video.

I stay away from Chris Rock due to his profanity and constant use of the "N" word. I like comedians who can make me laugh without such negativity. But I do like some of the music from Prince, so I decided to watch Saturday Night Live this November first. It is their 40th anniversary.


Putting him on "family television" would calm down most of his rhetoric, and something might even make me laugh. So I was surprised when he mentions that he attended an anti gun meet with some other celebrities and received death threats via his site. I guess no one is safe if they decide to stand up to what they believe is a danger or situation where guns might hurt people.


It wasn't, according to Rock, a major thing that he did. Basically, he stated no one should own a machine gun and live next door to a school. Sounds rational to me. But the main idea people all over would hate him and threaten his life is what irks me, especially I share Chris Rocks anti gun beliefs. He had stated earlier in his career he grew up in a neighborhood where gun fire was common. I did not but with everything that I read in the newspapers there should be less of guns out there and more control if we are to have them. Him being on television talking about this right before our gun debate in class I thought was perfect timing. If I can post a link of his opening monologue I will.




Saturday, November 1, 2014

ABOUT THIS BLOG-THINGS TO KNOW

Hello there.  Sekou the great is here. I am just letting you know how to surf my blog. This will make it much easier to access topics and read all my wonderful stories, articles, and video links.


Just click on a topic and you will see lots of interesting articles and videos. Many are interconnected to disciplines I learned in my Foundations Of Inquiry Class, so you will have an Idea of what I do on Mondays and Wednesdays. I will comment on many things and give you a sense of my views as well. there are tons of great stories and videos you will want to click on and judge for yourself.


You might want to comment as well yourself. So take a chance and learn something new. Enjoy, and happy blogging.












Don't forget to check out some of the awesome videos here. You will really learn something new and improved. Don't be afraid to get the new and updated videos from TED.











 

Economic needs are key as N.Y. seeks casino sites 

    


Developer William Walsh and his son, Peter, see their planned casino helping to generate jobs in Binghamton, N.Y.
Mike Groll/Associated Press
Developer William Walsh and his son, Peter, see their planned casino helping to generate jobs in Binghamton, N.Y.

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Developers competing to build a casino near Binghamton say the city has been listed among the most depressed, obese, pessimistic, and fastest-shrinking in the nation.
It may seem odd for backers of the planned Traditions resort to highlight local lowlights to the state officials who will soon choose upstate casino sites, but a big goal of New York’s gambling expansion is to bring jobs to upstate areas that need them the most.



Casino applicants like Traditions are promoting not only their ability to make money with a local casino, but how badly it is needed.
It’s an argument that resonates in New York’s Southern Tier. ‘‘The economy is so depressed around here, anything is a plus,’’ Steven Shaffer, owner of Pepe’s Bar-B-Q, said as he grilled chickens under a tent on a careworn Binghamton city street. ‘‘That’s how bad it is around here.’’
The Binghamton area boomed in the 20th century as IBM evolved in this area from a maker of punch-clocks into a high-tech powerhouse and waves of immigrants came for work, many to make shoes at the Endicott Johnson factory. The old story is that newly arrived immigrants would ask officials, ‘‘Which way E.J.?’’

Back then, a job represented lifetime security and neighborhoods thrived, recalled 68-year-old lifelong resident Diane Stento, who interned for IBM in high school when her father worked at E.J.
Many of those old businesses have left the area or dramatically scaled back. As in many upstate areas, the economy slowed.
‘We have to look at other revenue-generating opportunities and other ways to put people to work here.’
Bill Walsh, Prospective casino developer 
Quote Icon
 MY COMMENTS*************************************************************

Following our class discussion on the situation that has lasted in the state of Michigan, my selected article on casinos follows this pattern of "loss" here in America. Many of our cities and states have been hurt when a major company, like in Detroit, The three automakers, and in Upstate New York, IBM, leaves for whatever reason, mostly financial, and the town is , to a large degree, left jobless.  I have watched documentaries and read newspapers over the years, dealing with things as this. Why companies move to greener pastures is many times obvious. Tax deals, less cost, cheaper paid wages and such, may be better for the company, but the people left in that state are decimated. The whole city of Detroit, for instance, is fallen on hard times. Surrounding areas, if they were dependent on the automakers, are at a major loss themselves. Workers move to where the business and jobs are, and virtually no one wins except the company profit line.




Now, in upstate New York, IBM leaves for finer pastures along with Endicott Johnson, another major business, and the people in Binghamton suffer too. a casino may be there only option to bring lots of jobs into the area. Politicians and businessmen alike are putting their hopes into something that will revitalize the economy and build up the area. Hopefully things will work for the better for the masses.

Literature

Literature

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This article is about the art of written work. For the card game, see Literature (card game). For the literature referring to technical publications, see Scholarly literature.
The Classic of Rites (Chinese: ; pinyin: Lǐjì), an ancient Chinese text. Certain definitions of literature have taken it to include all written work.
Literature, in its broadest sense, is any written work; etymologically the term derives from Latin literatura/litteratura "writing formed with letters", although some definitions include spoken or sung texts. More restrictively, it is writing that possesses literary merit, and language that foregrounds literariness, as opposed to ordinary language. Literature can be classified according to whether it is fiction or non-fiction and whether it is poetry or prose; it can be further distinguished according to major forms such as the novel, short story or drama; and works are often categorised according to historical periods or their adherence to certain aesthetic features or expectations (genre).
Taken to mean only written works, literature was first produced by some of the world's earliest civilizations—those of Ancient Egypt and Sumeria—as early as the 4th millennium BC; taken to include spoken or sung texts, it originated even earlier, and some of the first written works may have been based on an already-existing oral tradition. As urban cultures and societies developed, there was a proliferation in the forms of literature. Developments in print technology allowed for literature to be distributed and experienced on an unprecedented scale, which has culminated in the twenty-first century in electronic literature.

The Wizard By Daniel Mendelsohn


 The Wizard

www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2010/mar/25/

Avatar

a film directed by James Cameron
mendelsohn_1-032510.jpg
ILM/TM/20th Century Fox Licensing/Everett Collection
Jake Sully’s avatar and Neytiri, his Na’vi love interest, looking out over the landscape of Pandora in James Cameron’s film Avatar

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MGM/Photofest
Dorothy and her friends on their way to the Emerald City in The Wizard of Oz, 1939






"But of course, when you see Avatar, what overwhelms you is what the technology accomplishes—not only the battles and robots, to be fair, but all the other marvelous stuff, the often overwhelmingly beautiful images of a place that exists somewhere over the rainbow. "





All this would be well and good enough, in its ecofable, Pocahontas -esque way, but for the fact that Cameron is the wrong man to be making a film celebrating the virtues of pre- technological societies. As, indeed, he has no intention of doing here. For as the admiring scientists—led by a chain-smoking, tough-talking woman called Grace Augustine, played by Sigourney Weaver (the chain-smoking is an in-joke: Ripley had the same bad habit)—protest to the trigger-happy Marines, Na’vi civilization is in fact technologically sophisticated: by means of a pistil-tipped appendage, wittily described by Crain as a kind of USB cable, which plugs into similar appendages on both plants and animals, they can commune not only with other creatures but with what constitutes a planet-wide version of a technology with which we today are very preoccupied. “Don’t you get it?” an exasperated Dr. Augustine shouts at the corporate and military yahoos who clearly intend to blow all the Na’vi to kingdom come. “It’s a network—a global network!”
Dr. Augustine goes on to describe how, by means of the pistil-thing, the Na’vi can upload and download memories, information, and so forth—and can even communicate with their dead. One such upload to Eywa herself, transmitted through the Tree of Souls by Jake’s avatar, will, in the end, help lead the Na’vi and their furry friends to victory over the human exploiters. (This, of course, is the Dances with Wolves paradigm.)
In its confused treatment of that favorite Cameron preoccupation—the relationship between the natural and the technological worlds—the film, for all its richly imagined and dazzlingly depicted beauties, runs into deep and revealing trouble. As we know by now, Cameron’s real attraction, as a writer and a director, has always been for the technologies that turn humans into superhumans. However “primitive” they have seemed to some critics, the Na’vi—with their uniformly superb, sleekly blue-gleaming physiques, their weirdly infallible surefootedness, their organic connector cables, their ability to upload and download consciousness itself—are the ultimate expression of his career-long striving to make flesh mechanical. The problem here is not a patronizingly clichéd representation of an ostensibly primitive people; the problem is the movie’s intellectually incoherent portrayal of its fictional heroes as both admirably precivilized and admirably hypercivilized, as atechnological and highly technologized. Avatar ‘s desire to have its anthropological cake and eat it too suggests something deeply unself-aware and disturbingly unresolved within Cameron himself.
And how not? He is, after all, a Hollywood giant who insists on seeing himself as a regular Joe—a man with what he called, in the New Yorker interview, a “blue-collar sensibility”; more to the point, he is a director whose hugely successful mass entertainments cost hundreds of millions of dollars obligingly provided by deep-pocketed corporations—a “company” man, whether he knows it or not. And these shows depend for their effects—none more than Avatar—on the most sophisticated technologies available, even as that director tells himself that the technology that is the sine qua non of his technique isn’t as important as people think; that, in fact, what makes Avatar special is the “human interest” story, particularly the love story between Jake and Neytiri:
Too much is being said about the technology of this film. Quite frankly, I don’t give a rat’s ass how a film is made. It’s an emotional story. It’s a love story. They’re not expecting that. The sci-fi/fantasy fans see the trailer and they think, Cool—battles, robots. What you really need to get to is, Oh, it’s that [a love story], too.
But of course, when you see Avatar, what overwhelms you is what the technology accomplishes—not only the battles and robots, to be fair, but all the other marvelous stuff, the often overwhelmingly beautiful images of a place that exists somewhere over the rainbow.



Will an &quot;<b>Inquiry</b> Letter&quot; Find You a Job?



MY COMMENTS***************************************************************
 
I liked this article by Daniel Mendelsohn very much. It encompassed many of the movies that I have watched over many years. He was able to go into many for the things that I did not even see or think about when many of James Cameron's films came out. Especially the mentioning of "The Terminator" films.


Of course I did note the "aggressor verses the natives" plotline, which we all have seen many  times before. But the writes Mendelsohn also mentions how critics brought up things such as that, rather than bring up the special effects, the technology and many more images and underlying elements of James Cameron films.


One of the underlying features was a man wanting or becoming like a machine aspect which was brought up. This I did not see or think about, even though in "Terminator 2" it was brought up. The young John Connor emulating the cyborg that protects him was something I thought was cute but did not see into it. Being a science fiction fan, I took that at face value and did not look into it other than being the back plot to the main storyline.


 There are always scenes or scripts written that deal with a variety of issues in movies and books. That is a given. I need to pay more attention to why it is being done, and what meaning these things have in our society, in my life, and its meaning in general.. Of course, I am there to enjoys the movie as well. So I must check things out a little more before leaving the theatre. It is always good to learn a little something.