4th Of July — 2017

july 4thToday is the 4th of July, Independence Day in America.  And, like it or not, there isn’t a person on this planet who doesn’t have an opinion about America.  The Land of Milk and Money generates some pretty strong passion — for and against.  So here are a few facts about America that most people either ignore or forget to remember.

Every year, the US government gives $32 billion dollars in non-military foreign aid to the rest of the world.  That’s free money, folks — courtesy of the US taxpayer.  FYI, nearly one billion of that goes to free vaccinations for children all over the world.

Not to be outdone, individually, Americans donate 258 billion dollars — that’s $258,000,000,000.00 — to charity (domestic and foreign) every year.

There are more museums, art galleries and live theatres in the United States than there are in any other nation in the world.

Plus the US has more public libraries (read: free) than all the rest of the world combined.

There is more medical and scientific research conducted in the United States than in any other country.

Americans have won more Nobel prizes — in every category, except literature — than any other nation.

In 2016, the United States used less fresh water than it did in 1970 — which is a good trick, considering most of the world is going the other way.

In real terms, the United States generates more sustainable energy and uses more renewable energy than any other country on the planet.

There are more electric cars driven in the United States than in the next two countries, China and Japan, combined — most of them in California.

If California were a country, it would have the 8th largest economy in the world.

Every single weekend, the night life of New York generates more money than the GDP of 80 of the world’s poorest nations.

The poorest 5% of Americans are still richer than 68% of the rest of the world.

And finally, two of my favourites:

Officially, the United States, like the rest of the world, uses the Metric System.  (It was signed into law by President Ford in 1975.)  However, most Americans couldn’t care less what a few politicians in Washington DC do and still use gallons, pints, pounds, ounces, miles, feet and inches.

Originally, the President of the United States did not pick the Vice President.  Constitutionally, the Vice President was the person who got the second highest number of votes in the Presidential election.  Think about it!  If the Constitution hadn’t been amended, back in 1800, Donald Trump’s Vice President would be Hillary Clinton!

Happy Independence Day, America!

Casualties Of The Internet (Part Two)

casualties

I love the Internet, but here are a few casualties of our increasing dependence on technology — Part Two.

Memory — Remember Algebra?  Neither do I.  It’s not important to me.  Nor do I remember the atomic number of zinc, how to spell concieve (conceive?) or the names of some of those odd little countries that used to be the Soviet Union.  I don’t remember any of that stuff.   But the Internet does.  It remembers everything.  Unfortunately, because of that, I don’t remember my Aunt Vera’s mailing address either, or my sister’s telephone number, or most of my friends’ birthdays — and these things are important to me.  My point is, for most of human history, people remembered things.  In fact, when stuff was really, really important, they carved it into stone — just in case.  However, since the Internet, we don’t remember much of anything — important or not.  We let the Internet do it for us and trust that some evil little hacker from Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan or Azerbaijan doesn’t get pissed off, one rainy winter evening, and wipe it all out.

Bricks and Mortar Stores — When I was a kid, the butcher used to call my mother “Mrs. Fyfe.”  My sisters used to flirt with the checkout clerks at the grocery store.  My dad knew the guys at the lumberyard — by name.  And, once, the girl at the bookstore hid the last copy of Welcome To The Monkey House under the counter for me.  These were not unusual occurrences.  Everybody my age has similar experiences.  These days, however, I haven’t been to a bookstore since I discovered Amazon because there aren’t any left in my neighbourhood.  (I’m not sure which happened first.)  I just bought a Roomba and the first time I saw it was when I opened the box.  I shop at a grocery store that’s so large it needs its own GPS and find myself envying people in England who can shop at Tesco from the privacy of their own pajamas.  We are the last generation of touch-and-feel retail.

Blood and Bones People — I have nieces and nephews I haven’t seen since they were children, but I recognize their husbands and wives.  I’ve seen their homes, know what they eat for dinner, where they go on vacation and what they do for fun.  I’ve had conversations (and arguments) with people I don’t even know.  Strangers compliment me every day.  I play games with people who don’t have names and might very well be figments of a digital imagination.  And I have no idea where many of my friends live because I’ve never met them. The truth is, even though we might not want to admit it, in the 21st century, most of us have just as much human contact online as we do face-to-face.  The problem is electronic people might LOL but they don’t laugh; they can emoji, but they can’t cry.  They don’t spill their wine, ruin your makeup, squeeze your hand, slurp their soup, or kiss you goodbye.  And it is this indisputable fact — more than what and how we remember, or where and when we shop — that’s changing our society more radically and rapidly than ever before in human history.

Casualties Of The Internet (Part 1)

casualties

I love the Internet, but here are a few casualties of our increasing dependence on technology.

Telephone Books — One of the first was the telephone book.  When I was a kid, everybody had a telephone book.  The first thing you did when you got a new one was find yourself in it.  It was an opportunity, as a little kid, to actually see that you had a place in the bigger world.  However, the best use of the telephone book was, on lazy afternoons, looking up people with funny names.  One year, Mrs. Cranston’s entire 4th grade class laughed for weeks when Marvin L. Ramsbottom moved to town.

Maps — Before the Internet, maps had the ability not only to place you in the world physically but to distinguish you from the billions of other humans occupying it –philosophically.  Back in the day, every kid knew this and to prove it they would eventually write their name, their address, their city, their county, their state or province, their country, their continent, their hemisphere, Earth, The Solar System, The Milky Way, The Universe.  And it all started with a little finger pointing on a map.  Practically, however, maps were the exclusive property of dads and were notorious for being badly folded, badly drawn and just plain wrong.  Eventually, all maps ended in a parental argument over exactly when to abandon middle-class machismo, stop the car and ask for directions.

Money — Incredible as it may seem, before the Internet, money was a tangible object.  It had weight.  It made a noise.  It told us just exactly where we stood in the world — because it was finite.  We either had enough money or we didn’t, and after a few trial and error disappointments, we discovered that the world is full of choices.  When bus fare, movie and popcorn were beyond our financial capability — somebody was going to walk.  Of course, all kids knew money was important because their parents were constantly reminding them that a) they (the parents) weren’t made of money, b) it didn’t grow on trees and c) they weren’t going to throw good money away on that (whatever it was we thought we wanted.)

So, what have we learned?

1 — Smart phones have put us all in me-and-mine electronic ghettos.
2 — Technology doesn’t give a rat’s ass about our unique position in the world.
3 — The near infinite nature of digital money has destroyed our ability to make decisions.
4 — Technology can suck the fun out of life.