Thursday, March 3, 2011

Need for More Ergonomic Computing



When I become mindful of my posture as I sit at the computer, I realize it's terrible. Sure, it's partially a bad habit. But it's also partially the result of a poor desk setup. Now, my laptop rests on two thick textbooks to elevate it to eye level. But it's still a bit too low and I end up bending my neck down and leaning into the screen (especially to read smaller text), sometimes putting my elbows in the desk in front of me. This is doing horrible things to my shoulders, neck and back! I guess I'll try putting another book underneath and see if that helps.

I've been meaning to post this for a while, just as a reminder to myself and others about the importance of good posture and an ergonomic computer set up. I heard on NPR's All Things Considered yesterday that one of the issues Wisconsin unions have focused on is helping people receive compensation for work-related repetitive stress injuries. So it's a serious issue. But the problem is that it's difficult to prove if a computing-related injury has been caused at work or at home.

So here is a wesbsite with some ergonomic computing tips. Enjoy!
http://www.ergonomic-computing.co.uk/workstation.htm

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Takae in Context - Part 2

http://www.japanfocus.org/-Yoshio-SHIMOJI/3354

This article does justice to the U.S. military situation in Okinawa better than I could in my previous post.

For those interested in more in depth reading, I strongly recommend the related articles at the bottom of the page.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Losing Sleep Over Marine Corps Golf Courses

NO!NO!

Last night I lost sleep because I felt the need to get up and blog about yesterday's protest. (More video coming soon!)

Tonight I'm losing sleep because I wanted to try to find out who owns and operates U.S. military golf courses in Okinawa. From what I know, Japanese tax dollars pay for the utilities at U.S. military bases. Does that mean they are also paying for the maintenance and upkeep of U.S. military golf courses? The U.S. military has golf courses all over the world: http://www.militarygolfcourseguide.com/.

The Taiyo Golf Club, for example, was recently rebuilt by the U.S. Marine Corps. According to the Marine Corps Community Services Okinawa website, "...Taiyo Golf Club, which opened on March 1, 2010 and is already drawing comparisons to the finest U.S. military golf facilities in the Pacific, if not the entire world." In these difficult financial times, how is it possible that our military finds it appropriate to spend so much money on this kind of recreational facility? It's simply irresponsible.

Golf courses are a huge drain on natural resources, requiring tons of water to keep the greens green. When I read this about the history of the above golf course (formerly Awase Meadows), I was really disturbed:

After years of negotiations (the decision to return the land [to Okinawa/Japan] was made in 1996), a conglomeration of landowners collectively decided that the course will be developed into Okinawa's largest shopping mall—a monstrous three-story Jusco. This new facility, which will also house a theater and hospital, will cover almost half of the scenic golf course's property.

And, although watching the last golfers finishing their last round on this venerable course will be a sad day indeed, Okinawa's newest, and possibly the greatest, Marine Corps golf course is just over the horizon.

"The new course will be on the same level, if not better than, many of the current private courses on the island," says Rich Erland, Director of Golf/Golf Course Superintendent at the Awase Meadows Golf Course. This new course, which is currently under construction in Uruma City near the Kurashiki Dam, is slated to be top notch in all departments. Covering approximately 6,800 yards and encompassing 247 acres (compared to Awase Meadows' 5,765 yards and 110 acres), this new course is slated to be completed in early 2009....Although the new course is slated to be light years ahead of Awase Meadows in almost every aspect, one thing will remain the same: the courses mission will be to serve its most beloved customers—the servicemen and women that defend the United States of America.

Instead of restoring the land to its natural habitat, the citizens of Okinawa got a mega-mall and U.S. military golf course doubled in size. This is destroying the environment of Okinawa. More posts to come on U.S. bases and the environment. This is morally, ethically, politically, financially, and environmentally wrong. Just wrong.

Take action through my blog.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Takae Protest Hip-Hop Video

I took this video of the "No Helipad in Takae, Okinawa" protest yesterday (2/20) in Shinbashi Hibiya (SL) Square, Tokyo:





More video from 2/20/2011 protest to come!

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Takae in Context

Why are the events in Takae, a rural village in Okinawa, Japan (the Ryukyu Islands), important to America and the rest of the world? To understand this, we need to look at Takae in context.

First, we have to look at the history of Okinawa (see Wikipedia). Without summarizing the entire history of the islands, note that they have been a contested territory in the modern (post-Meiji) era. China and Japan vied for control of the Ryukus, which were annexed to Japan and granted constitutional rights and freedoms (such as the right to vote) years after the rest of Japan's four major islands. After World War II, "Okinawa was under United States administration for 27 years. During the trusteeship rule the United States Air Force established numerous military bases on the Ryukyu islands."(Wikipedia) During the Vietnam War, Okinawa was an important strategic point for U.S. military forces, and evidence that Agent Orange was stored or used in Okinawa has recently come to light. (Agent Orange is an extremely toxic herbicide used as a chemical weapon in Vietnam.) Now, 75% of all U.S. military personnel in Japan are stationed in Okinawa. Thus, Okinawa's history in the modern era reflects the struggle for international power, control and dominance in East Asia.

According to many Okinawans, this is a painful history. The lack of sovereignty and the ubiquitous presence of the U.S. military is a troubling part of post-war memory. The relocation of the Futenma airbase has brought these issues to the fore, causing a major controversy in Okinawa and Japan at large. According to Wikipedia:

The governments of the United States and Japan agreed on October 26, 2005 to move the Marine Corps Air Station Futenma base from its location in the densely populated city of Ginowan to the more northerly and remote Camp Schwab. Under the plan, thousands of Marines will relocate. The move is partly an attempt to relieve tensions between the people of Okinawa and the Marine Corps. Protests from environmental groups and residents over the construction of part of a runway at Camp Schwab, and from businessmen and politicians around Futenma and Henoko, have occurred.[32]

The legality of the proposed heliport relocation has been questioned as being a violation of International Law, including the World Heritage Convention, the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage.[33][34]

The controversial relocation plan has sparked a continuous sit-in at the proposed relocation site for over six years. During Prime Minister Hatoyama's term last year, I remember seeing a major headline about the Futenma relocation issue almost every day. While this has become a major issue in Japanese politics, representing the imbalanced relationship between Japan and America, it remains largely unknown in America.

In this context, the plan to construct six U.S. military helipads in the rural village of Takae and surrounding Yambaru forest as an extension of Camp Gonzalves (a.k.a. Northern Training Area, Jungle Warfare Training Center) has been met with considerable controversy, including a continuous three-year sit-in at the proposed construction sites.

To take action on this issue, join the protest on January 20 (Japanese) to demand the stop of the construction of the U.S. military helipads in Takae, Okinawa!

English call to action (look for English below the Japanese):
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/hansentoteikounofesta09/20110127

If you can't join the protest in Tokyo, please write an email to the U.S. Ambassador to Japan.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Efficiency: a new paradigm?

In a recent speech, President Obama called for the prioritization of energy efficiency as a means for job creation. (Obama-Touts-Clean-Energy-As-Jobs-Booster) Big applause to Obama for moving in the right direction. It should have been done ages ago, many might complain. But the important thing is that it gets done, sooner rather than later. Efficiency may have much broader applications beyond environmental and energy policy. As political rhetoric and metaphorical language, efficiency could be a buzz word that unites a variety of disparate policy issues, such as the environment, government reform, military reform, and media technology. In the above example, we see it mixed with job creation: energy efficiency can lead to a more productive economy.

Several months ago, I wrote a post on a Unitarian Universalist meeting in Tokyo which featured Asby Brown speaking about his book Just Enough: Lessons on Living Green from Traditional Japan. What struck me about the talk was the way almost everything was reused in traditional Edo Japan. Reflecting on this theme for the past few months, it is of course apparent that we need to relearn some of the "precycling" techniques that frugal peasants used out of necessity. However, the concept of using "just enough" and reusing the rest may be applied in a more metaphoric sense. Not only should our products and packaging have multiple uses, but so should our intellectual and digital lives.

Multi-purpose ideas.
Multi-purpose media.
Energy efficient thinking.
Not just win-win solutions, win-win-win solutions.

A great example of this multi-purpose, multi-level, multi-meaning efficiency is freerice.com. The website allows you to play educational games (such as an English vocabulary quiz game), and for each correct answer rice is donated through the U.N. World Food Bank program to countries and people in need. Conceptually, it is my favorite website. It combines education, recreation, humanitarian aid, and entrepreneurship to create a 4-win situation. You win when you play the game (it's fun and you learn something); the people of Haiti win (all the rice this year is donated to Haiti); and advertisers sponsor the site to get revenue for their businesses (and they boost their image as socially responsible or progressive by underwriting humanitarian donations). That's a win-win-win-win media solution, and that's something that doesn't seem to happen much. But it should happen more.

"Gaming for change" is becoming an increasing reality. For example, online gamers could plug into a network to find and treat cancer cells, effectively crowd sourcing oncology and radiology. Check out these podcasts to hear more about how gaming can (and is) changing the world:

http://www.wpr.org/book/110213a.cfm
http://www.onthemedia.org/episodes/2010/12/31

What does freerice.com have to do with efficiency? By combining multiple purposes into one site, a user doing one activity can work toward solving four problems. This is efficient media use and efficient problem solving.

Note the difference between a multi-purpose activity and multitasking. Multitasking has been proven by loads of research to be hopelessly inefficient. It has been proven time and time again that people can only actually focus on one thing at a time: it is in fact impossible to be conscious of two things at once. Attention is actually indivisible. (You can try this for yourself by slowing your thoughts down through awareness and watching them as they arise. You will see that your mind darts between sense perceptions and various constructed thoughts or impulses. I think Buddhists have noticed this phenomenon for thousands of years, but that's the subject of another post.) In short, multitasking is effectively prolonged distraction, whereas a multi-purpose activity allows for prolonged, concentrated attention on one stream of thought or action, and the activity itself has multiple, intentional outcomes.

In the current economic and political environment, efficiency has the potential to be a powerful political metaphor. Piggy-backing on the green-washing movement that has been promoted through the advertising of even the most conservative of companies (think B.P. and McDonalds), efficiency can also reshape notions of "waste, fraud and abuse" which have come as attacks from the right-wing and tea party movements. It takes the concerns of these groups seriously. Indeed our government should run as efficiently as possible, while still providing the vital services, such as civil engineering and education, that would otherwise be neglected. This is hardly debatable from either side of the aisle.

The word efficiency, and its associated metaphors, could have the power to change even the most stalwart government institutions, namely the military. Here is the metaphor:

Our current military is like a gas-guzzling 18-wheeler careening down a steep hill into a bottomless financial abyss. We need to put on the brakes, bring it in the garage, and give it a tune-up for the 21st century.

This military reform could be draped in the language of efficiency to emphasize the need to make our military run more smoothly and effectively. In a literal sense, what if we retooled all our military vehicles to run on 25% less gasoline? How many jobs would this create and how much money would it save in expenditures?

The need for military reform was recognized over 50 years ago by President Dwight Eisenhower in his farewell speech, in which he called for checks to the dangerous power then commanded by the "military-industrial complex."


Full video available at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2465144342633379864#.

I recently attended a talk about Afghanistan by Matthew Arnold, who has worked with the French military in Afghanistan, the U.N. as an aid worker, and is currently writing a book about Sudan. He is an expert in conflict resolution. Arnold argued that only special forces, such as the Green Berets, can do appropriate, small scale counter-insurgency in Afghanistan. Large scale military operations, such as the current deployment of the Army, are largely unproductive and ineffective. Basically inefficient. In his concluding remarks, he acknowledged that the American war in Afghanistan is basically a failed effort. "At some point you have to do a basic cost-benefit analysis. Spending one trillion dollars on an unfortunate war that was somewhat necessary is a mistake."

John Kerry seems to support troop reduction in Afghanistan, even if he is backing away from his original statement as a political moderate. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/06/john-kerry-breaks-obama-afghanistan_n_819243.html) On a more basic level, the Obama administration is realizing the need for more financially competent soldiers. (see "Local bases – and Obama – press for financial literacy in the military") Actually, Matthew Arnold's talk was mainly about the perceptions and identity of Afghans, and based on 300 interviews, he found that Americans are viewed as wasteful and financially incompetent. They get hustled and pay way more for products, services and contracts in Afghanistan than any native Afghan would. Thus, they've earned a reputation for not only being reckless spenders, but also for contributing to corruption in the Afghan government.

Today, lawmakers voted to cut a $450 million in funds for a military jet fighter engine project, signaling a tightening on defense spending. (Story at http://www.npr.org/2011/02/17/133847158/In-Win-For-Obama-House-Kills-Jet-Fighter-Engine)

Military reform needs to be a real issue. I absolutely support President Obama's re-election in 2012, but the left needs to apply real pressure to make defense spending a priority. The proposed budget does not meet this challenge. Rather than stopping the construction of unwanted military bases in Okinawa, the Obama administration is cutting funds for heating low income homes (i.e. the LIHEAP program) American tax dollars maintain golf courses on military bases abroad, but won't be used to construct high-speed rail at home.

I envision a military that largely works as a domestic self-defense force in the vein of the National Guard, rather than a foreign aggressor. (I'm not taking an isolationist stance, but I think it's largely the job of our diplomats to handle foreign threats and disputes, not the military.) This NPR story about a National Guard commander who helped a pregnant woman get to the hospital to deliver her baby during a recent snow emergency almost brought tears to my eyes. It illustrates how the military, so often vilified by those in the anti-war movement, can be a force for peace and well-being at home.

We can look to other countries to find examples of militaries that are far different from our own. Japan is prohibited from having a standing military capable of waging war through Article 9 in its constitution, although it maintains a Self Defense Force which has taken on many of the military's functions and features. Moreover, Article 9 prohibits Japan from using war as a means of settling international disputes. Though its interpretation has been controversial and led to a dependence on the U.S. military for defense, both its advocates and opponents must note that it has prevented Japan from taking a larger role in global military and combat actions.

We might even learn something from Egypt's military, which has become as much of a state-sponsored business as security force. In a sense, the military as a job creation machine doesn't really bother me (perhaps it should). As long as the military is focused on domestic projects, why not use it as an umbrella for jobs that will lead to economic health and prosperity? Of course, this sort of military must also be run efficiently, and the jobs created through it should be of high quality and value.

In short, the linguistic shift already being used by the Obama administration is a focus on efficiency. Though the above description of a reformed military may seem like an idealistic vision, it may become a political reality through the language of efficiency.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Takae Post Series|高江記事シリーズ





In preparations for Sunday's protest, I will be making a series of posts on the situation in Takae, Okinawa. The first is the post below on foreign U.S. military bases. The next will be a post on "efficiency" as a potentially effective political buzzword. Topics of upcoming posts include Takae in context; bases and the environment; bases and nuclear weapons; defense reform; foreign bases in American and Japanese media; the need for dialog with military personnel and veterans; and the roll of civil disobedience in the American military base debates in Okinawa and Japan.

To take action on this issue, join the protest on February 20 at the American Embassy in Tokyo, or send an email to U.S. Ambassador to Japan John Roos.

Stay tuned!




日曜日のデモの準備のために、沖縄高江の米軍基地問題について記事のシリーズを始めます。(日本語が下手ですが、頑張ります!間違っている所を教えて下さい。できるだけ日本語で書くようにしています。)下の米軍基地記事は初めです。今度の記事は「効率性」「高江の背景」「基地と環境」「基地と核兵器」「防衛や米軍改革」「アメリカと日本のメディアで米軍基地」「軍人交流の必要性」と「デモや座り込みの役割」。

手伝いたいと思ったら、日曜日のデモに来たり、高江のブログで色々な行動したりすることができます:http://takae.ti-da.net/

よろしくお願い致します!