State of the World Address: Part Two

Like I was Saying
In Part One of my State of the World Address, I was talking about how traveling has given me hope. Traveling has contributed to my belief that we, as humanity, may actually survive this mess. My hope is founded upon the observation that the majority of people in the world (about 5/6ths) are basically doing OK and are good people. Somehow, this was news to me. Unexpectedly, while traveling, I was encouraged by the general goodness and well-being of humanity. This general goodness and well-being provides a necessary foundation but not a sufficient condition for hope. The sufficient condition for hope has to with developments in world history that are unique to our time. In my view, the real reason for hope is that the conditions necessary for a global transformation of consciousness are being put into play for the first time in history, courtesy of globalization.

The Noosphere
Globalization is a big word signifying (in part) a whole series of social, economic, cultural, and especially technological developments on a global scale that are making our world smaller and faster. A global infrastructure of systems of information, communication, transportation, and commerce is being put into place, and the velocity of its implementation is increasing. The Internet, mobile phones, satellites, and electronic media are nearly ubiquitous. We are saturating the planet in a web of global interconnectedness. Continue reading

State of the World Address: Part One

In the next few posts, I am going to consider the impact of my travels on my own understanding of life, the universe and everything and attempt to make some general observations about how I see the world now that I’ve been around it some. This is my “state of the world” address, The big picture as seen by yours truly. But first, as a prelude, and without further ado:

The Top Five Questions I have been asked since returning home from my travels

What is the most unusual or disgusting food you ate while traveling?

Unusual is probably Guinea Pig (Peru).  Most disgusting is definitely The Durian (Malaysia), topping even the “parts” in brown sauce that made me Puke For a Week (Ecuador).

Does everybody hate us here in the good ol’ USA? 

Yes, but mostly they hate George Bush.

What is it like to be home? Any culture shock?

It feels like I never left, mostly. Everything and everybody is more or less exactly the same. But American life as I left it and found it again does seem stranger and sadder than it had before. In a land of such abundance and personal freedom, there is an over-abundance of confusion, fear, and pain.

Which brings me to questions 4 and 5; questions that I will spend the rest of this post (and the next couple posts) attempting to answer.

What have you learned about the world? How has traveling changed you?

Continue reading

India. Blink. Singapore.

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Under a full moon on a hot sticky night in Southeast India, tossing and turning in a mosquito tent pitched on a dingy mattress in a dingy closet of a room. The fan is not cutting it. I’m covered in sweat. In spite of the tent something is biting my elbows and knuckles, leaving lines of itchy red dots. No sleep. I flip on my headlamp, read, flip it off, try to sleep. Not a wink. At 4:30am I give up. Bus leaves at 5:30. No point to sleep now. The guest house barricade is propped up from the ground just enough to squeeze under on my belly and drag my pack through. Out on the street, it’s quiet. Such a contrast from daylight hours. An old man is firing up his corner stall. A young kid in school shorts, toes stretching for the bike peddles, creaks past. The dogs, comatose in the heat of the sun, are bold now. The night belongs to them. They bark and charge in packs of three and four. I reach for the ground, pretending to pick up a rock. They yelp and scurry away, but continue to stalk me, from a safer distance, barking barking.

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The bus stand is waking up. The dosai and chai stalls are steaming, hot milk bubbling. Barefoot bow-legged men with dhotis wrapped around their loins, button-down collar shirts tucked in the folds, slap down rupees and huddle around the makeshift stands, sipping chai. Women in bright saris and dangling nose chains. Bleary children. I join the huddle, downing a few hot cups of tea in a vain effort to stimulate consciousness. I’m used to India at this point, after six months. The cows meandering. Piles of sleeping human on concrete. Dirt and garbage. Store front sign stacked upon storefront sign, the swirling cyphers of Tamil. The push of crowds. The smell. None of it is exotic or strange; it’s just people living, life going on. But this is my last day, my last few hours, in India, and I’m breathing it all in. The bus drivers are waking up, having stretched out on a bus seat for the night, and are brushing their teeth in the rear-view mirror. By this afternoon I’ll be in Singapore. I have no idea what to expect. I know nothing about the place, other than it’s cheap to fly there from Chennai.

The bus blasts past the bullock-carts, motorbikes, and pedestrians, honking full speed through narrow village lanes, driving mostly on the wrong side of the road. I’m used to this as well, charging honking accelerating forward in spite of oncoming Tata trucks, squeezing at the last possible second to safety. I used to grip the seat back, my heart in my throat, each time. Now I barely notice. The South India morning is stunning, lyrical voices float with the rising sun across the brilliant green rice fields, singing. Temple priests light incense. People bathe in the river, brushing teeth, combing hair. Little naked-butt kid scrubbed down by mom at the fountain, school uniform standing by. There are countless moments of grace in the midst of this chaos, a beautiful mess. India. Continue reading

The Politics of South America, the Mines of Potosí, and a Desert of Salt

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Uyuni, Bolivia- South America has become the site of perhaps the world´s most critical battle over the flavor of international commerce and the meaning of cultural identity in an era of rampant globalization. At present, all over the continent, nations are being forced to decide whether to join the “free-trade” tidal wave under the strong arm of GWB and the multinational corps, or to forge an alternative to neo-liberalist “imperialism” by creating regional and hemispheric alliances with which to challenge the USA. Globalization is a given. The question is how to respond to global markets and develop internally while retaining both traditional ways of living and control over national resources. In simpler terms: how to not get screwed by the big boys. The battle is being drawn in virtually every country in South America, causing internal and international conflict. Ecuador, Chili, Colombia, and Peru have all made, or are making, their deals with the US, but not without massive civil dissent and sometimes overt repression.

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The other side, firmly and defiantly challenging US hegemony, is being led by the vocal rabble-rousing President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, and the indigenous champion of the Bolivian populace, President Evo Moralis. Together with Cuba, they have formed a trade alliance that they promise will stand proudly and effectively against the US cartel, and provide a vehicle for economic development and global trade independent of blood-sucking foreign investiture and multinational financing (read IMF and World Bank). Chavez is meddling in the affairs and elections of neighboring countries, trying to increase his brand of socialist-democracy throughout the continent. His open support of Ollanta Humala in Peru´s recent presidential election may have actually contributed to Humala´s defeat, as his opponent, Alan Garcia, was able to convincingly portray Humala as a puppet of Chavez. (Or maybe Garcia won because the name “Alan” was painted on virtually every visible space in the whole of Peru; on curbs, homes, trees, mountains; even after hiking hours up above the tree-line I would suddenly encounter a large boulder painted blue with “Alan” in big white letters.) Meanwhile, Evo Moralis is busy nationalizing the major resource industries of Bolivia (e.g. gas and oil) and redistributing vast tracts of farming land to the poor and indigenous campesinos. Continue reading