Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Agency Approves a Birth Control Pill Halting Periods Indefinitely - New York Times
Thanks to Darr for sending this over.
Quite simply: YAY
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art - Christoph Büchel - New York Times
How awesome?! I love that they are fighting it out. I love the concept of the piece itself. I love the giant tarps. It is so wonderfully fucked up that you can't help but laugh and appreciate the ridiculousness. Thought I should share.
US Airways and Quality Inns: Hell NO!
The above story feels especially important today, as I spent almost twenty-four hours trying to get a flight out of Philly to Tampa through US Airways. Partially, I am almost certain, due to the issues US Airways and America West are having with their pilots, but the service afterwards is what really got to me and my fellow passengers.
The airline referred us to Quality Inn in Gloucester, New Jersey. (Quality Inns are "Choice Hotels".) Maybe its the extended time spent in the area, but starting with the word "Jersey," you know you are in for a bit of an experience. The first time I called them, they said they would call me right back. I waited twenty minutes, called again, discovered the airport shuttle would be there in ten minutes. For the next forty-five minutes, I sat with my fellow would-be passengers, waiting fr this shuttle, which we were assured was "almost there" whenever we called.
Once we got in the shuttle, we discovered the driver had been asked to pick us up only twenty minutes before. My hotel room had one light broken and no smoke detector. I was better off than the woman whose toilet was flooding the second she entered the room or the other lady who had no functioning lights.
In the morning, the Quality Inn turned out to be the least of my problems, despite their half-an-hour-late airport shuttle going the other way. I stood in line, watching Miami passengers who were supposed to take the same flight to Charlotte as me get to go to a special line while I was denied. Ten minutes before my flight left, I started crying, absolutely unable to deal with missing my flight because I didn't have a ticket on top of the rest of my weekend and everything this airline had put me through. The woman monitoring the line finally noticed me, even though when I was crying I was trying to avoid her, unlike the last half hour. I got on the next flight, a direct one to my destination.
I know other people were yelling at the gate manager and I know that this ridiculousness was not his fault. I was more struck by the problems of being a good little labor loving girl and the inconveniences I had to put up with. Half of my troubles, ignoring the initial one of not having a flight, were not the result of the airline pilots. It was US Airways that had a relationship with a motel that has no chance of being livable. It was US Airways that had employees so poorly trained that they couldn't deal with a situation explained to them as "I need to be on the same flight as those people, can I please go?."
So that's a cautionary tale regarding US Airways, or at least regarding not searching Google News for your airline before you travel!
Other side of the coin: This is the second time I have had to spend the night somewhere because of a screwed up flight. The last time was four years ago. I missed the second leg of my trip because the first flight took forever getting off due to a crew waiting for a missing passenger. Both times, I have found the passengers with me willing to help one another, comfort one another and figure out what needs to happen. I think its proof that there is a lot of good in the world. Not to sound like a Dear Abby column, but it is telling that under pressure and stressed out from a bunch of bureaucracy that is keeping them from their loved ones or other destination, people rally and aid one another instead of letting everyone just fend for themselves. Camaraderie is natural. That's a nice thing.
More on other stuff later!
PS: I'm officially staying off of US Airways and Quality Inns. US Airways may get my business when they deal with their pilots and stop having late and canceled flights. Quality Inns probably never will. That is how capitalism is supposed to work. Boycotting isn't just about morals and principles; its about doing your part as a consumer... which means staying away from idiotic companies.
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Bigotry and Inanity Disguised as Reform
This newest proposal from a team of senators trying to work everything out fails on every level for the Democrats.
Why are they working with GOP leaders to create a solution to a problem (if you want to call immigration a problem) that is the pet of President Bush, his goal at a legacy? I realize that there are going to be problems from the GOP as well as the Democrats, but if Bush gets anything passed, it will be a coup for him and his political capital will skyrocket. American associate immigration with Bush policy initiatives. The only potential upside is throwing immigration into the GOP primary pot and seeing what gets stirred up.
The political impracticalities are large. Read the NYT article up top for how immigration groups are freaking out. Plenty of immigrants become naturalized every year and typically will vote Democratic. While the bill could create more Democratic voters in the long term, it will only anger traditionally Democratic voters and may make Hispanic communities think twice about voting at all. If anything, it will send them to Republicans, who are getting more and more Catholic voters and will be seen as more open to Hispanics while Democrats weren't willing to work for them.
Also look at American voters, this survey taken from a USA Today/Gallup Poll from last month:
PollingReport.com
"Now thinking about immigrants who come to the United States illegally -- Which comes closest to your view about what the government policy should be toward illegal immigrants currently residing in the United States? Should the government require illegal immigrants to leave the U.S. and not allow them to return. Require illegal immigrants to leave the U.S., but allow them to return temporarily to work. Require illegal immigrants to leave the U.S., but allow them to return and become U.S. citizens if they meet certain requirements over a period of time. OR, Allow illegal immigrants to remain in the United States and become U.S. citizens if they meet certain requirements over a period of time." Options rotated | ||||||
. | ||||||
| Leave, Not Return | Leave, Temporarily Return | Leave, Return and Become Citizens | Remain and Become Citizens | Unsure | ||
| % | % | % | % | % | ||
| 4/13-15/07 | 14 | 6 | 42 | 36 | 2 | |
. | ||||||
| "Do you think the U.S. has made progress or lost ground in dealing with illegal immigration in the past year, or has there been no change?" | ||||||
. | ||||||
| Made Progress | Lost Ground | No Change | Unsure | |||
| % | % | % | % | |||
| 4/13-15/07 | 12 | 43 | 42 | 3 | ||
So basically, Americans want immigrants, even those who entered illegally, to be allowed to become citizens. Bush's guest worker program has no political will. Nor does a massive crackdown. Democrats can get more from this package, if only they would put the word out. Republicans have managed to tell everyone what the country is thinking and thus Democrats, never answering the problem, have let them control the agenda.
Now let's look at this bill itself: (all quotes from the above linked NYT article)
Under the merit-based system envisioned in the bill, the government would adopt a point system to evaluate the qualifications of many people seeking permission to immigrate. Points would be awarded for job skills, education and English language proficiency.
I actually think the first criteria here, "job skills," makes sense, although I can see how it could hurt those entering the country to create a better life. Education makes some sense as a criteria too.
The English language proficiency, however, strikes me as another attempt to make English the national language. I don't speak anything but English. I took Spanish classes (I almost failed Spanish classes.) but from living in Florida I can get to a toilet and order a basic dinner (pollo y arroz). English as a national language is still racist. Giving people points for something that can be fairly easily learned through immersion (which would happen from moving here) is simply a way of attacking those who are not fluent in English as "unAmerican," whatever that means in this context. Why Democrats agreed to do something like that I cannot understand.
Moreover, they said, family ties would be an advantage in the proposed point system. If two applicants had the same skills and the same educational credentials, but one also had relatives in the United States, that person would receive the visa.
I am taking the NYT's word for this to some extent, but if you listen to last night's NPR story on the new bill, there is a lot of waffling on what "family ties" means. This projects the American nuclear family onto other cultures, where kinship ties are often stronger and much more complex.
Speaking of kinship...
[Illegal immigrants] could work in the United States under probationary status and could receive renewable four-year “Z visas.” Heads of households would have to return to their home countries to apply for green cards if they wanted to become lawful permanent residents and then citizens.
In addition to the inevitable failure of the Z-visas, which will become a de facto guest worker system, I want to know how the heads of households will be defined. Something about it just screams "men will be in charge" and that is disturbing both for immigrants from traditionally patriarchal societies, who may feel abandoned, and for any women trying to get work in the U.S.
More later, as the debate comes through. Also, some tomorrow on a text for a political science class I am taking. It will a special grammar, vocabulary and the idiocy of publishers episode!
Fun note: This bill is all about rights for gay immigrants and I love it, even though it will never get out of committee.