Happy Thanksgiving!

Every year I write something about the actual history of this American holiday, versus the modern interpretation. I used to just send it to friends and family, and then last year I posted it on my blog. This year, I noticed some interesting stories in the news like this one about school teachers emphasizing the “Indians’ side”.

Teacher Bill Morgan walks into his third-grade class wearing a black Pilgrim hat made of construction paper and begins snatching up pencils, backpacks and glue sticks from his pupils. He tells them the items now belong to him because he “discovered” them. The reaction is exactly what Morgan expects: The kids get angry and want their things back.

Morgan is among elementary school teachers who have ditched the traditional Thanksgiving lesson, in which children dress up like Indians and Pilgrims and act out a romanticized version of their first meetings.

I do not discount the importance of this subject, or the lesson taught by Morgan. However, I find it strange that instead of just unravelling the yarns by exposing the true history of the holiday, the teachers actually perpetuate the modern interpretation before attempting to revise it again. Who knows, at this rate of distance from its origins, maybe in a hundred years there will be a fat man in a red suit called Old Saint Lincoln who brings turkeys to children who have been nice to their neighbors…

Personally, I always think of the holiday in terms of a President who wanted a united nation to rise above its years of discontent and discord in order to notice the bounty of good deeds done even under the duress of civil war — to recognize and therefore seek a common humanitarian purpose.

Consumers unaware of mercury poisoning risks

The water quality risk, caused by the externality of the chemical herbicide and pesticide industries, as well as other weakly regulated industries that dump waste on people, may also become known as the mercury poisoning of America. The AP has a telling story today about the lack of awareness that not only allows companies to continue poisoning and evade cleanup accountability, but also the susceptibility of consumers to harm on a daily basis:

“We don’t test a lake or river and not find some level of mercury,” [environmental scientist for the North Dakota state Health Department] Ell said. “It’s pretty widespread across the state. We don’t have levels that are high enough to issue any kind of bans, but some lakes have concentrations where, in some species of fish, we just advise people to limit their consumption to smaller fish.”

Mercury is a toxic metal that can cause nerve damage in humans and is particularly dangerous to children, developing fetuses and women of childbearing age.

Lists are starting to emerge from the private sector watch groups as the US government lags not only in stopping the causes, but addressing the symptoms and regulating dangerous levels of mercury sold over the counter:

Oceana says that without in-store signs, most consumers lack the knowledge for good choices.

Its report says stores in Hawaii, the District of Columbia and Alaska are doing the best job of educating consumers, and it put 15 companies on its “green list,” including Safeway, Trader Joe’s and Albertson’s.

Most of the grocery chains that serve West Virginia were on the more than 50-member “red list,” including Kroger, Food Lion, Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, IGA, Giant Eagle and Save-A-Lot.

Jeff Lowrance, spokesman for North Carolina-based Food Lion LLC, said there is no state or federal law requiring supermarkets to post such information.

Thanks to weak environmental (read: infrastructure security) regulation, sustainability will decline as the cost of living increases dramatically. In other words, if you are in America, don’t touch the water and don’t eat the fish unless you bring a chemistry set to identify the toxicity; or just outsource your supply to someone who understands the risks.

Wikiview

I love those scenes in sci-fi movies where a goggle or robotic eye prints out a set of data. And I vaguely remember something about an MIT student who was able to get his notes to appear on a portable screen when he attended class (using geolocation and time calculations his “wearable” computer knew which class he was in and when). Only a matter of time before someone tried to squeeze Wikipedia into our view:

one site plots geotagged Wikipedia entries on to Google Earth (www.webkuehn.de/hobbys/wikipedia/geokoordinaten/index_en.htm). If these Wikipedia entries could be sent to us as we passed through the corresponding areas, it would be like having a tour guide in our mobile phone

Mobile phone? Handhelds are so Star Trek. I’m thinking Robocop Visor or Terminator Sunglasses. Talk about the emerging struggle for control over eyeballs…

US military accused of illegal recruiting

…as opposed to recruiting illegals. From a letter by Senator Boxer sent to Francis J. Harvey, Secretary of the Army on November 3rd:

According to an ABC News report, nearly half of the recruiters profiled in an undercover investigation knowingly provided misleading information to potential recruits about the risks of enlisting in the U.S. Army. In one particularly shocking clip of the investigation, a recruiter is seen telling a recruit that the United States is “not at war,� and that the “war ended a long time ago.� Another is seen telling a recruit that “we are bringing people back� from Iraq.

The war ended a long time ago? I have not seen the report, but the only thing worse that I can imagine is a recruiter telling a recruit “don’t worry, we’re only at alert level orange”.

Sorry I do not have more details to point to online, but all I have is a copy of the letter sent to me via email.