Exhale

shiva

This is an email I sent to my friends. Thoughts about the election after the champagne bottle had been emptied.

wow.

did that just happen? i’m still in a pleasant shock that we got obama into office. great job everyone. and for those of you who didn’t or couldn’t vote, thanks for the powerful positive vibes that envisioned this outcome.

the last few mornings i’ve woken up, i checked the news to make sure that somehow i hadn’t dreamt it, or deluded myself with wishful thinking, or finally gone crazy from 8 years of bush. but no, the only electoral uncertainty now is whether we have a few more democratic senators or not.

one of the best things about the elections was that florida didn’t matter. neither did ohio. missouri? thanks for coming to the party. now why don’t you go down to the corner and get us some more champagne.

the level of goodwill towards america just went up by a bazillion percent. i’m sure you’re reading all about how the world loves obama. but what the world is really loving is that we elected him. never mind that most industrialized countries won’t be electing anyone black for a long time, if ever. the world wants america to be held to higher standards, and i think we should welcome that. we’ve been a country of hope and promise, (even if it hasn’t always been true).

i’m excited to represent that.

we just have to remember what obama said during his acceptance speech, that electing him is not the goal. it’s just a means to the goal. now the hard work begins. i know the next several years are going to be tough. what a mess the world is in. but now i feel a little lighter on my feet, ready to get up and start dancing again.

love,
wind

Election Day Notes From Tokyo

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The Oracular Email

I first watched Barack Obama at the 2004 Democratic National Convention and immediately I emailed a friend and wrote, “Did you hear this Obama guy? He’s going to be president.” I don’t know if I really believed that. But he was the kind of stirring unifying figure the country needed, that even then we were starving for. I certainly didn’t think he would be president this soon. When he decided to run for president two years ago, I thought it was premature. I didn’t think he could prevail against Democratic heavyweights like Hillary Clinton. Even if he got nominated I felt there was no way that he could survive the nasty invective of Republican electoral tactics.


This guy would have to be perfect.
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The Perfect Candidate

It reminds me of the movie, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. It’s about how a white woman brings home her black boyfriend, played by Sidney Poitier, to dinner to meet her family. Her parents, played by Hepburn and Tracy, are socially liberal but excruciate over the hardship their daughter would have to experience in a mixed-race marriage. As if the whole thing is their choice.

Poitier’s character is perfect, a well-educated, internationally-respected, humanitarian doctor. And handsome to boot. As well as well-mannered and deferential. There was nothing that they could criticize him about. Yet they excruciated until the end. By the end, I was wondering why such a distinguished and accomplished man would bother with an undistinguished white woman and her annoying family. Of course, the movie was just a parable of the impossibly high double standards placed on black folks.

That’s what Barack has had to do, present a flawless image (never got angry), have impeccable credentials (first in his Harvard law class), and raise a storybook family. As the campaign progressed, I became increasingly impressed with the discipline, focus, savvy, and hard work of his operation. Everyone writes about how his campaign used the internet and cell phones so deftly, but more remarkable is the massive work on the ground by volunteers. He was able to mobilize the largest campaign organization ever. That’s a good sign of an able leader.

Observations from Japan
I’ve been following the elections from Japan. It’s late night in the US, but it’s a beautiful sunny Wednesday afternoon in Tokyo. I’m still old enough to be amazed at how I can cover events so closely on the other side of the Pacific through the internet.

I’ve been watching ABC News’ coverage live, only because CNN doesn’t stream outside the US. And after watching for a few hours, all i can think of is that Sam Donaldson looks like a Romulan. I’ve been tracking election results through the CNN and New York Times web sites, able to follow the demographic minutiae of the voters. I love the internet! Continue reading

The Olympics Deconstructed

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It’s the last day of the Olympics and as usual I have opinions.

Save Baseball
I just finished watching the sweaty-palmed 9th inning of the baseball game between Korea and Cuba for the gold. Korea was leading 3-2, but the Cubans had the bases loaded with only one out. The Korean catcher had just gotten thrown out of the game for arguing a pitch. And the starting pitcher was sent to the dugout after pitching a superb game.

Then the Cuban batter hit a grounder into a double play. Korea won, and that was another huge upset in an Olympics full of them. The Cubans had won gold four out of the five times that baseball has been an Olympic sport. That was a fun exciting game.

Sadly, that was the last Olympic baseball game since the sport was voted out of the next Olympics. There were a variety of reasons that the Olympic committee decided to boot baseball and softball out of the games. All of them are ridiculous.

One of the reasons cited was that the stadiums were costly to build and then never used again by the host countries. But it’s easy to turn it into another kind of playing field. And what about all the kayak slalom courses, the BMX bicycle piles of dirt, the equestrian fields? I doubt these facilities are used much too.

Baseball is one of the few sports played avidly in and dominated by Latin American countries. It’s played in sandlots by poor kids. It’s a democratic game, with many participants, drawing from many kinds of athletic skills. Baseball should be allowed to stay. But it won’t because the Europeans have never been able to dominate it.

Ditch the Boats and Horses

I began to think about the games that are less democratic, more difficult to participate in.
I think there should be limits on how expensive the equipment used in the sport is, and how difficult it is to acquire the equipment.

Take for instance equestrian events. First of all, it’s the horse that’s doing all the work. We might as well put in car racing into the Olympics. Second, who can afford to participate in this sport? A horse costs more than a luxury car. And did I mention it’s the horse that’s actually doing the jumping and running? If we’re going to do horses, why don’t we just do horse racing, cock fighting, and competitive bird calling?

Another expensive sport is sailing. Sailing? Really? How many countries can afford to send athletes, horses AND sailboats to the games? Perusing the participating countries, they are concentrated in Western Europe, North America and Australia. And how many people even in these countries can afford to ride horses or sail boats? I don’t know any one of my friends who can, and none of us are poor.

Equestrian and sailing. Get these sports out of the Olympics. Only the richest members of the richest countries can even think about joining in.

Reduce, Reuse and Recycle

There’s a second tier of sports requiring specialized, expensive equipment as well. I’m okay with rowing, cycling, and even kayaking. But I’m not okay with having 14, 18, and 16 events in each of these. I figure if you have a short, medium and long distance race, with variations of individual and team, men and women, then that adds up to 12. Anything more is excessive.

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The Rich and the Repressive
Track and field has the most events at 47. But I’m okay with these. They require almost no equipment (although I don’t know where I would get a javelin, a vaulting pole, or the thing they throw in the hammer), and they are quite varied.

At 34, I don’t quite get why there are so many events in swimming. What I do know is that a few years back Australia built hundreds of Olympic size swimming pools all around the country and now they’re a swimming powerhouse. Almost half of their 44 medals are in swimming.

So government commitment and good facilities is pretty important. And it’s only a country of about 23 million people. North Korea has the same number of people, but there’s no way they can even afford to build one swimming pool. Their swimming medal count is 0.

Basically, Australia decided there were a lot of medals to be had in swimming and went for it. That’s good strategy. China is also focusing on individual sports where there are many medals to be had and now they’ve won the most gold. But why do these countries need to be at the top of the medal count? Does it make their society better? Do other countries cooperate with them more if they sweep the fencing medals?

Rich countries definitely have an advantage in the Olympics. A rack of those new Speedo swimsuits costs more than the GDP of Haiti. The rich countries are also able to import the best athletes from poor countries. So it’s great to see a country like Jamaica do well. The Jamaicans send their athletes to train in the US but bring them back to compete for Jamaica. That’s a good strategy for poorer countries.

Nations with authoritative governments with highly organized sports infrastructures and the ability to abduct children at a young age to inhumanely train them into good comrade athletes do pretty well too. The former Eastern bloc countries are still reaping the rewards. Cuba is a milder example of this. China is perfecting this.

The rich and the repressive. They win all the medals. And they rank numbers 1 and 2 in the medal count.

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The Alternative Medal Count
I’ve often wondered what the true medal count would be based on the medals won in proportion to a country’s population, or how rich they are. That’s why I’m so excited about Bill Mitchell’s alternative medal count. Mitchell, an Australian economics professor has made such calculations. You have to check out his website: http://www.billmitchell.org/sport/medal_tally_2008.html

Based on how rich a country is, using its GDP, North Korea ranks number one, getting the most medals for the size of its terribly small economy. Zimbabwe and Jamaica follow. Most developed countries rank low.

If you compare the GDP per capita to the number of medals won, then North Korea still leads, but China is number two, and Ethiopia is next.

If you base the medal count on a nations overall population, then Jamaica heads the list, with Slovenia and Australia ranking behind.

Mitchell also makes rankings based on the team size and by gender. It’s a fabulous project and worth checking out how he made his calculations.

The Ridiculed Sports
There seem to be a handful of sports that are casually ridiculed in the American press. I decided to take a closer look at these sports and see for myself.

One of the most ridiculed is synchronized swimming. After watching the competition, I decided that it’s not ridiculous at all. It involves a lot of power, stamina and control, and yeah, synchronization. It also requires a good choreographer. The same with rhythmic gymnastics. That was just breathtaking and entertaining. It’s like competitive Cirque du Soleil.

And enough about making fun of table tennis and badminton. These are sports dealing with pure reflex, super speed and quickness. Best of all, these are sports that are easy to participate in, requiring only relatively cheap equipment.

The more democratic the Olympics is the more it will balance out the dominance of the few countries that pay its way or repress its citizens into nationalistic glory. More importantly, it would encourage more people to participate in sports, rather than be alienated by the odd spectacle of sailboats and horses winning medals for their masters.

The G8 In My Neighborhood

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Police Presence
Yesterday and today I noticed that there were many policemen around my neighborhood. There was a cop on every corner. They all paced the sidewalks clutching their fully extended batons. On several side streets were parked the big blue buses and vans that the police use to round up rioters or protesters. And patrolling the streets were many patrol cars.

I only see this kind of police presence when the dreaded black vans of right-wing extremists blare their jingoistic drivel and patriotic songs. But I didn’t hear any of the usual signs. And usually they harass busy stations and menace embassies, not residential areas.

A Meeting of Ministers
After a little investigation I found out that the G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministerial Meeting was being held at the Westin Hotel, which is a few minutes walk from my apartment. So I strolled over to the Ebisu Garden Place, where the Westin is, and found a whole street of the blue buses and vans, and a lot of police officers roaming around.

The G8, or Group of 8, used to be the G7, a summit of the leaders of the 7 richest countries: the US, the UK, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, and Canada, plus the EU. About 10 years ago, Russia joined the club. The meeting is held yearly, and hosting responsibilities are rotated among the members. This year, it’s Japan’s turn and The Summit will be held in Hokkaido, July 7-9, far from the masses of potential protesters on the main island, as happened in Germany last year.

Before the main summit, the different ministries have their own summits. The Justice and Home Affairs meetings doesn’t seem as sexy as say the Foreign Ministers meeting or the main summit itself. But check out the topics on the agenda and it’s quite an intriguing list.

• Counter-terrorism (unavoidable topic and undeniably sexy)
• ID-related crime (trendy and timely issue)
• Countermeasures against drug crimes (so 80’s)
• Universal networking against transnational organized crime (very sexy)
• Capacity building assistance (huh?)
• The fight against sexual exploitation of children (probably the most important agenda, affecting the most people)

If it was me, I would have also added the illegal trafficking of organs and people. And I doubt ‘transnational organized crime’ includes corporate crime: pollution, labor exploitation, market manipulation, and accounting chicanery.

The Summit

This will be the last G8 for George Bush, and the first for Dmitry Medvedev, Gordon Brown, and Yasuo Fukuda. While protesters demonstrate, the world leaders mostly party together, since the hard work is done during the ministerial meetings.  I guess George never learned to pour a beer properly.

Then they hold press conferences while they’re drunk.

Also attending will be a recent addition of the G8, the O5. The Outreach 5 are developing nations with economies that have bulldozed their way into the top 10, or are getting there. China is chief among them, with Mexico, Brazil, India, and South Africa. South Africa is a strange one in that group since it’s economy is nowhere near the top 10. Egypt may have been a better representative of a major African economy.

These five come at the insistence mostly of Japan and Italy. And it resembles suspiciously the group of countries that is seeking permanent membership in the UN Security Council (except of course China, which is already a member). To really round out the top dozen economies though, both Spain and South Korea should be included.

Spain will be represented by the rotating EU presidency, which is currently held by Spaniards. And now that Ban Ki Moon, the UN General Secretary, has announced he will be attending, I suppose South Korea will also be represented in a roundabout way.

Every year the host country sets the agenda. What’s on the agenda this year?

• Climate Change and the Environment (As the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases, these countries can have the biggest impact on this issue. Come on you idiots, make it happen.)
• Development and Africa (Great issue to raise, and urgent. But I can’t help but view this as a broader strategy by Japan to get UN member nation support to become a permanent Security Council member. Hopefully, the African Union representative can develop some leverage towards real benefits.)
• World Economy (They always talk about this issue in every summit. It’s really the original and main purpose of the G8 Summit: how do we make more money.)
• Intellectual Property Rights (See above. The real agenda here is about controlling the internet, and forcing internet providers to disclose how its subscribers use the web.)
• Nuclear Non-proliferation (Also known as: how do we keep other countries from having what we already have. I’m all for keeping any countries from having nuclear weapon capabilities and that includes all the countries that already have them.)

The G8 Summit is one of the more interesting global events, right up there with the Olympics and the World Cup, so I recommend following the proceedings like any other sporting event. For more information about the G8 Summit you can check out the informative Wikipedia page, the official site, which has more detailed info, and also this site for kids, which I find odd on many levels.

38 Special

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It’s my birthday today. My Lakers swept the Nuggets and are through to the 2nd round. That’s a nice gift. And I couldn’t ask for better weather. It’s warm and sunny, and there’s a sweet breeze that makes me want to drink cool water. But I’ll settle for a glass of wine on the balcony.

Most birthdays I like to do every day things. My theory is that whatever you do on your birthday is the tone you set for the rest of the year. I have a short list of things I have to do. Dance. Play guitar and sing. Play a flute. Write some poetry, maybe a song. Laugh liberally. Do some gardening. And most satisfying of all, do some deep housecleaning.

Occasionally I’ll throw a party, like the now legendary Red Party that I threw when I hit 30. Thanks to my buddy Gil, who donated his house and his neighbors’ goodwill, over a hundred people showed up, and most of them were dancers or musicians or artists. So it was one big audience participation performance, from flamenco to salsa to tango, culminating in the best jam session of infectious dance music that I’d ever experienced. Everyone had to wear red, bring red wine, and I concocted a never ending stream of sangria from a big box of citrus. That’s the gold standard of birthday parties.

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I had a much quieter party a few days ago. It was at this cool place in Roppongi, called Fioria Ariablu, that’s essentially a glorified karaoke room. I picked out the course menu and the all you can drink option. The room had a little waterfall that emptied into a warm pool of water underneath the table so we could soak our feet and relax while we ate and sang. Towels were included. I also liked the air ionizer that made us instantly feel good as we entered the room.

At parties, I like to have little activities to get people involved and be creative. That’s my credo: creativity, collaboration, community. I try to practice it whenever I can. So I did stuff like write a haiku for each guest. I had everyone say a word of the day, which Erin combined into one text and reads like a beat riff. Here’s the result:

One birthday in France, eternal friendship and a credenza. Tsukiri cocoon. I love the universe!

I had them bring something from their travels. Others had to guess who it belonged to and what country it was from. And we ended the night with a rousing “We Are the World.” We had so much fun we hung out outside for over an hour just chatting.

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Yesterday I also bought myself a gift. A little plant that I haven’t been able to identify. It caught my eye when I went shopping for lavender. T’s first words when she saw it was, “Tasty! I want to eat it!” She also wanted to make tempura out of the tender persimmon leaves that are pictured at the top of the post. In my Oregon garden, I had to deal with gophers, squirrels, crows, slugs, aphids, and mold spores. Now I have to ward off my own wife. But that’s one pest I really don’t mind dealing with. Continue reading