A little less exciting, a lot more fulfilling, was my ride home from a meeting Tuesday afternoon, compared to Monday afternoon. Two moose grazing near the airport.
You don't get this in London, Jacob. Or having everything 15 minutes or less away.
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Wednesday, May 07, 2014
Monday, May 05, 2014
Cops Surround Car Come Out With Guns Aimed
We just dropped off the wood chipper we rented today and were headed along Commercial to Mt. View when a police car passed us quickly and we saw others ahead. The cop jumped out of the car and had his gun out and pointed at the car ahead. Two more cars came racing in as we sat there trying to figure out what to do. Here's a picture after an ambulance arrived. I took some video, but I was too far back for you to see it clearly.
Finally, another officer tapped my window and gestured to turn around and go back.
KTUU has this:
Finally, another officer tapped my window and gestured to turn around and go back.
KTUU has this:
According to APD spokesperson Dani Myren, police were conducting an agency assist for “U.S. Treasury federal agents” near the intersection of Bragaw Street and Mountain View Drive at about 4:15 p.m.
“It looks like we were assisting on a felony extraditable warrant,” Myren said.
Myren says it’s not clear whether the man was trying to commit suicide, but confirms that he did shoot himself and is in unknown condition.
“It looks like there’s a self-inflicted injury at the very least,” Myren said.
Sunday, May 04, 2014
"Don't Even Begin to Talk To Them Until You've Forgiven Them For Everything"
It's just too nice to be inside blogging. So here are a few pics about things I'm not blogging about. [It turns out I couldn't keep to that goal when I tried to briefly summarize the Citizens' Climate Lobby meeting. The title gets explained near the end.]
After the Citizens' Climate Lobby (CCL) meeting Saturday morning I biked the long way home and digested what I'd heard. Dana Nuccitelli, a physicist who writes, among other places, at Skeptical Science, gave some highlights of the latest U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Report. There were actually three recent reports. The key findings he reported for the first report:
You can listen to the international phone in presentation here. These meetings are content rich and move right along. If you just want to hear the part where Dana talks, go to 11 minutes, where he's being introduced. and goes to 27:16.
This post's title comes from a little earlier in the tape where CCL Executive Director and meeting host Mark Reynolds is talking about one of the CCL staff who was planning a meeting with the Koch brothers. He was trying to explain his difference between being 'nice' and being 'generous.'
I'll put up the other pictures later. Maybe.
Goose Lake still had ice Saturday |
After the Citizens' Climate Lobby (CCL) meeting Saturday morning I biked the long way home and digested what I'd heard. Dana Nuccitelli, a physicist who writes, among other places, at Skeptical Science, gave some highlights of the latest U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Report. There were actually three recent reports. The key findings he reported for the first report:
- 95% confidence level that humans are the main cause of global warming since 1950.
And that humans are responsible for about 100% of global warming since 1950. In each of the reports since the 1990s, they've grown in confidence level that humans are the cause. - Predict how much warmer it will get under three different scenarios
- Business as usual - about 4 or 5˚C (about 9˚F) warming by 2100 as compared to pre-industrial temperatures
- The GOOD NEWS: If take action to limit greenhouse gas emissions we can still limit global warming to 2˚C by 2100. He said 2˚C is a critical number because scientist believe if we go above that we'll have really severe climate effects. Some scientists say that 2˚C is already too much, but we've already risen 1˚ and another 1/2 will result from the greenhouse gasses already emitted. So 2˚ is the only reasonable goal we could achieve.
- For another 2˚C increase we will see an annual decrease of 2% of global income per year and potentially more than that, and if beyond that, economists aren't even comfortable estimating how large they'll be. Basically it gives us an economic incentive not to go beyond that 2˚C limit.
- If we act efficiently we can keep global warming going beyond that 2˚C and it will only cost 0.06% of annual global economic growth. Putting that into perspective if the global economy grows at 2.3% per year, using that 0.06% figure, it would grow at 2.24% per year.
You can listen to the international phone in presentation here. These meetings are content rich and move right along. If you just want to hear the part where Dana talks, go to 11 minutes, where he's being introduced. and goes to 27:16.
This post's title comes from a little earlier in the tape where CCL Executive Director and meeting host Mark Reynolds is talking about one of the CCL staff who was planning a meeting with the Koch brothers. He was trying to explain his difference between being 'nice' and being 'generous.'
"Sometimes people get confused about what we're trying to do when we we're attempting to do this in the most generous way we possibly can. What people translate that into sometimes is thinking that we're trying to be a nice organization. And I don't have any problem with being nice and I'm not against nice people, but that is not what we're trying to do. 53 In my view, being nice implies a certain phoniness, like when you pretend to like someone you don't like. Whereas human generosity is asking yourself to do something you can't possibly do. Let me give you one simple example. I was at a luncheon last November with [corrected spelling: Peter Fiekowsky] who heads up a couple of big projects for CCL. He's the head of TeamAs you can see, I got carried away with the meeting and actually did write a whole post. the picture is of Goose Lake which still had, yesterday, ice on the surface of most of the lake. But we've had several days with temperatures into the 70s (at least in our backyard) so it can't last long.Loyal[Oil] and he's also in charge of our hundred year plan. We were talking before lunch and he had said he'd scheduled his first meeting with the Koch brothers and he asked my advice on what he should talk about. I try to take as big and generous a view as I possibly can of dealing with people and I really failed in that case because I told Peter I don't know why you're talking to them, I think these are terrible people, I can't imagine meeting with them, I think they're evil, and it's a bad thing. Peter's always great with me and he's like, OK, Mark, I got that, that's your feedback [?], do you mind if I talk to Father Gerry? Father Gerry O'Rourke is an 89 year old Catholic priest, who both Peter and I have known for decades and he was instrumental in the North Ireland peace process. So Peter went off and talked to Father Gerry and we talked later and I said, what did Father Gerry say to you? And he said, well, he started by saying basically what you said. And I'm like, see, Peter? I told you so. And then he said this: I'm going to tell you to do what I told the people in Northern Ireland they had to do. And that is, Don't even begin to talk to them until you have forgiven them for everything.
So that doesn't mean you say out loud to someone "I forgive you." But it's asking yourself to do something you're not capable of doing at that moment. You know, I think Charles Du Bois said it correctly. "The important thing is this: At any moment to be able to sacrifice what we are for what we could become." I think that's the organization we're trying to be and the way of working we're trying to emulate and sometimes people confuse that with something simple called "nice" and I just wanted to be clear that we're all talking about the same thing."
I'll put up the other pictures later. Maybe.
Saturday, May 03, 2014
How Much Do You Pay Your Lobbyist? Nothing? Maybe That's Why
. . . the things you want your legislature to pass don't get passed. The Alaska Public Offices Commission posted the list of Alaskan lobbyists, their clients, and their fee on April 24, 2014.
This list is by the lobbyist, with a list of their clients and their fee for each client. They vary, some are 'annual fee', some 'hourly fee', some 'monthly fee.'
Check out how much different organizations are paying to get continuous monitoring of legislation and access to legislators. And consider how much you are paying for this kind of service.
I really haven't had much time to look at this list carefully, but, for example, I'd note that GCI pays:
This list is by the lobbyist, with a list of their clients and their fee for each client. They vary, some are 'annual fee', some 'hourly fee', some 'monthly fee.'
Check out how much different organizations are paying to get continuous monitoring of legislation and access to legislators. And consider how much you are paying for this kind of service.
I really haven't had much time to look at this list carefully, but, for example, I'd note that GCI pays:
- Ashley Reed $50,000 a year"All legislation, and administrative activities,regarding or impacting phone andtelecommunications services"
- Reed Stoops $40,000 a year for "All telecommunications issues relating to GCIsinternet, cable, telephone, wireless and TVbusiness in Alaska."
- Sam Kito Jr. $40,000 a year for"All things regarding telecommunication issuesand broadcasting issues"
- Eldon Mulder $40,000 a year"All issues pertaining to informationtechnology, broadband andtelecommunications."
Friday, May 02, 2014
Anchorage Summer Begins When . . .
the birch leaves open.
That's my calculation anyway. Our backyard thermometer says 75˚F (23˚C). It's been too nice to stay inside and try to write something serious. These are the birch leaves in front of our house. I don't remember them ever being this early.
So I've been in the yard doing work that doesn't yet feel like work.
That's my calculation anyway. Our backyard thermometer says 75˚F (23˚C). It's been too nice to stay inside and try to write something serious. These are the birch leaves in front of our house. I don't remember them ever being this early.
So I've been in the yard doing work that doesn't yet feel like work.
Thursday, May 01, 2014
LVN IT - License Plate Ambiguity
So, it says ALASKA on top. We were guessing what the bottom meant:
Loving It?
Living It?
Leaving It?
Labels:
Alaska
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
The Terns Have Returned
The Arctic Tern is one of my favorite Alaska birds. It's sleek, it can hover (as in this photo) and it travels all the way to the Antarctic for our winter. And they move so fast that I've never been able to get a decent picture. But the new camera is changing things. The pictures will get better.
Most of the birds haven't arrived yet. It's still only April. Mostly there were gulls - like these mew gulls.
Another mew gull making lots of noise.
Red necked grebe.
You'll have to make do with bird pictures. I really didn't want to write about basketball owners, or sexual harassment in the Alaska National Guard. It was such a beautiful day, and now, at almost 10 pm, it's still quite light out. (I just checked. Sunset is at 9:59pm today.)
Monday, April 28, 2014
Cloud Show
The clouds were putting on a show this afternoon when I went out for an errand. A nice thing about traveling by bike, there's nothing between you and the sky and you can stop easily to take it all in. Despite being almost 60˚F (16˚C), there was a cooling, more-than-light breeze and the clouds were moving and reshaping.
This cloud was hanging over 36th and stretched way out toward the Chugach mountains.
And I passed by where Nino's Italian Eatery used to be. It looks like the Department of Transportation, which bought the building two years ago, has removed the building completely now. Eventually they plan to reconfigure the turn from New Seward from south to west on 36th in this spot.
You can see how fast those clouds were moving. This picture looks east toward New Seward and 36th. The sky is mostly blue and it wasn't more than three or four minutes later that I took the other pictures from 36th on the other side of New Seward.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Get Your Bikes Out - Trails Are Clearing
Last week on the Campbell Creek trail east of Lake Otis (south of Tudor) the trail was mostly snow and ice, but today it was clear all the way to Elmore. I'd show you pictures, but my camera was free of its sound card. There are even buds starting on a birch tree in front of the house. People who used last year's cold May - it snowed the 21st - as evidence that global warming wasn't happening, have this year to remind the there's a difference between weather and climate and there can be annual variations. But overall things are getting warmer each year and I've got some sweet pea seeds I'm soaking overnight to plant outside tomorrow. (When we got to Anchorage in 1977, the rule of thumb was not to plant anything outside before June 1.)
I don't know how Chester Creek trail is doing; anyone try that out this weekend?
I don't know how Chester Creek trail is doing; anyone try that out this weekend?
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Where Are The Most Diverse US Census Tracts? - Chad Farrel at Press Club
Anchorage Press Club conference - Saturday morning panel that I attended. [Paraphrasing what he said quickly, read with caution.]
Starting with Sarah Palin's 2008 comment that Alaska is a microcosm of America which got a lot of flack, including Frank Rich. Farrel showed up in Alaska to teach sociology and has found that, in fact, the US Census Bureau's 'broad, admittedly crude' categories of ethnicity, that Palin was actually accurate on this one.
- White
- Black/African American
- Latino/HispanicAsian and Pacific Islander
- Alaska Native/American Indian
- Biracial/Multiracial
These broad categories miss a lot of the diversity that exists in each category.
Also show the socially constructed nature of race, why I use "Ethno-racial" diversity.
Formula - you could do this analysis with income, age, occupational diversity etc. Not
just racial.
Get statistics that are intuitive to normal folks. You get:
1. Number of groups present in an area
2. Size relative to one another
Imagine three neighborhoods.
1. All white (not many left in US) - no ethno-racial diversity
2. Mixed, but 99% white - still more diverse than #1
3. Mixed, all equal sized - high level of diversity
This index takes this factors into account - from 0 - 100.
0 = just one group
100 = all six groups the same size
And inbetween, lots of variation.
How diverse is Alaska compared to rest of US?
Frank Rich was right in terms of Blacks and Hispanics, but he left out our Native population and bi-racial, multi-racial identity.
Alaska is 5th behind Hawaii, California, Nevada, and New York. 73 72 69 66.3 66.1
Multiple pathways to scoring high. Where does Alaska rank?
photo
Compared to US as a whole, Alaska ranks a little higher. Big surge after 1990 - first year Census allowed people to check more than one box. Resulted in the surge.
Moving to Anchorage
San Francisco (#2 - 77) more diverse than Anchorage. (#30 - 64)
Anchorage (#30) more diverse than Seattle (#43)
Q: What about military?
A: Plays a big role. Military the most diverse social institutions in the country.
More diverse than most Western cities and US. Gap is widening in 2010 Census from 2000.
Moving into diversity within the groups.
American Community Survey - Census data collected between the decennial years. Doesn't count everyone, but one question allows person to identify 'ancestry or ethnic origin' with examples.
Farrel too all the groups with more than 1000 for Anchorage - pooled from five year chunk, bigger sample size. image
Some people put down "American." Discussions in my class whether American can be an ethnic group. (Largest proportion of Americans in Southern states.)
Q: Yupik didn't hit 1000?
A: No, but a lot of people didn't fill out the question.
Q: Did this include Matsu?
A: Not this one, but the previous data did, which brings the diversity down.
Q: Sense that Yupik population equals the Athabascan?
A: Can't really speculate. Will say ethnic identity is fluid.
Linguistic Diversisty
Anchorage School District 95 different langauges spoken at home.
UAA - lots of student diversity
Why is Anchorage so diverse? Characteristics of diverse metropolitan areas. (Not necessarily causes, housing could be consequence.)
Coastal/Border state √
Large population
Renter households √
Military presence √
Immigrant gateway
Immigrant outpost √
Youthful population √
Click to enlarge |
Guiding Questions:
Neighborhoods - census tracts (not necessarily neighborhoods - about 4000 population)
Use census tracts as a proxy. Track 11 - cluster of Mountain View, 6, 9.01 (merril field) and 8.01 (Wonder Park).
Three most diverse tracts in US. The one thing that makes them diverse in Anchorage is the Native population.
Further down the list - most tracts in Anchorage have higher than US average diversity.
High Schools
Parent asked if East High was, based on the tracts diversity, the most diverse high schools.
18,000 public high schools - East, Bartlett, West high schools most diverse in US.
Anchorage high schools more than double diversity of average high school.
Q: Why higher diversity in high schools than tracts?
A: 1. immigrants tend to be younger and of child bearing age.
Q: Schools more diverse because of less residential segregation?
A: There is segregation, but less than other metro areas in US. Did study on exposure to diversity by whites and Anchorage is higher.
Next steps:
1. What are the consequences of diversity? Can't get at that just with the numbers. But intergroup contact theory covers this. Lots of lit. Exposure to diversity tends to increase tolerance for out groups. Reduces reliance of stereotypes and prejudice. Can see individual variations which undermines stereotypes.
2. How do residents experience and negotiate diversity in their daily lives? # 1 works if social-economic groups, in the same school class. Integrated or diverse group working toward the same goal. Benefit of contact.
But, if inequality layered on top of diversity? Groups competing for scarce resources - who gets the soccer field at the park?
I've given top down view, but we experience diversity on the ground, and that's where the media comes in. Journalists have a unique skill set to dig up these stories and how we're negotiating diversity in our daily lives. We're at the forefront of that trend in the US (increasing diversity). How we negotiate that trend has implications for the rest of the US.
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