Archive for the ‘government’ Category

In the Navy

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

US Navy

New York’s Fleet Week is basically legendary in America. If you’ve never experienced it, Sex and the City’s Season Five had a great episode that shows a lot of what it’s like for a woman in the City during that time. For those unwilling to watch it, just imagine a beautiful, bustling city that sadly has more women than men. Now, imagine for one week in late spring — when skirts and open-toed shoes are finally able to be worn again — boat loads of athletic-built men (who’ve seen few women for the last four months) unloading into the city, uniforms and all. It’s basically every New York gal’s dream (well, you know, besides the job at the top of the masthead, the three-bedroom apartment in SoHo, or the new pair of Manolos). My first summer in New York, Fleet Week happened to be the second week of our stay. I’m pretty sure it’s what spurred my friend Kim and I’s pact that summer that we’d never leave a bar until both of us had gotten a drink bought for us (which definitely brought out some good stories by the end of the summer).

See, it’s not that we were the most beautiful girls stepping into the New York joints. But, well, guys in New York buy drinks for girls all the time. And military guys are often even more old-school…buying drinks (and dinner), opening every door, walking the girl home. It’s the kind of treatment girls like me grew up getting from guys, friends or otherwise, and tend to expect from any guy in pursuit…and it’s the kind of treatment girls who’ve never had love for its doting nature.

OK, OK…so I haven’t been watching any Carrie Bradshaw lately or reminiscing with old photos…so why bring all this up? Well, this past week in Perth was pretty much a mini Fleet Week with our own US Navy and Marines unloading more than 5000 service men and women onto the shores of Fremantle, near Perth.

It was honestly so entertaining watching their reception by the locals. The war in Iraq and US policy are extremely unpopular in Oz right now (to say the least). But none of that spilled over to how the Americans were greeted. The local 20- and 30-something women were practically out in droves hoping to meet up with a young Yank. One visiting British girl was telling how excited her coworker was to hear about the boats’ landing. “We’re SO going out this weekend,” she’d said. “The American Navy’s in town. You need to hook up with one. They’ll like buy you jewelry! But don’t sleep with them. You might get an STD.”

So, maybe dating an American sailor is kind of like doing politics with America. We strike up a lot of excitement and bring the promise of nice things for other countries, even if they know they might get a little dirty from it…and well, in the end, a little gold goes a long way in getting people to forget about the bad.

But when you’re a visiting American, politics definitely don’t matter and dating an American really has no novelty. You just need to think about enough banter to get you through a polite conversation with the 20-year-old based out of San Diego who bought you that drink (or how to play wing woman for your Aussie friend).

Word Wars

Sunday, October 7th, 2007

War on Democracy poster

After seeing posters all over Australia for the country’s September release of War on Democracy, I was eager to see it.

Reading up on it, I was still eager to see it. According to the website, it’s made by an Emmy-award-winning Australian journalist (living in London) and it tells the story of “the historic and current relationship of Washington with countries such as Venezuela, Bolivia, and Chile.” So, yesterday afternoon I hopped on into the theater with my bag of popcorn and cup of Sprite.

Huge disappointment. First off, the presentation was wretched. After seeing the strong-imaged posters, I expected the film to have similar images. That it did not. The quality looked like the videos I’ve been putting on this blog…and I’ve only been using the free software that came with my computer…and spend only an hour or so putting them together. A feature-length documentary, I believe, could afford a bit of flair. But flair was definitely lacking. As was a certain journalistic quality. Like most “documentaries” of recent popularity, this film is simply a soapbox for the writer, director, and/or producer to portray his (or her) viewpoint on a certain subject (unlike the old school documentary Hoop Dreams, which really was without much creator assertion but was still a fascinating watch). And worst off, director/writer/presenter John Pilger failed to present balanced facts that any journalist should…for instance American media was more than half the time presented through Fox News stories (and as anyone knows is the majorly conservative news station in the US), and quoted presidents and “sources” were all from Republican administrations. Worst, though…there were just not hard facts. Pilger spent far too much time arguing with (outlandish) Duane R. Clarridge, a former chief of CIA operations in the area discussed, about how many people were killed by a US-backed government. And when Pilger failed to support his argument (just go to the walls, NGOs, and other sources you spoke to and count the names, mister) with an actual number, it comes across as just one more crack in his argument, that could have been supported with facts and not just anecdotes.

Because of these things and the lack of any semblance of a story line, I have to guess this movie will not be shown in American mainstream theaters…or maybe even small art-house ones.

Which is sad…there is much truth in Pilger’s film, and our country’s foreign policy is something that I would love to become more of a regular dialog in media and our national community. But with the poorly-crafted film, Pilger’s pillaged information seems doomed to stay in countries where the viewers already know about (and have quite strong opinions) on what they’re watching.

You’re preaching to the choir, Pilger.

You Drive Me Crazy

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

road sign

I love that on the Great Ocean Road, a major tourist attraction and easily self-driven, there are signs everywhere that say “Drive on left in Australia.” It reminded me of being in Sydney where most curbs are painted with white lettering telling pedestrians which way to look before starting to cross.

Sure, these helpful bits are functional, and I can just imagine an all-too righteous American tourist exclaiming to the cops when they’ve come to write up an accident report, “But nobody told me that you all drive on the left here! Why should I have to be responsible for the accident?” But I hope the driver who has made it this far on a trip knows which side to drive on…that’s why I originally took the photo in the first place…a little more Jayna snark.

But then I realized that well, I probably could have used a few little other reminders myself when driving here. Specifically:
1. The driver’s side is on the other side of the car. (posted on the front passenger side window…or even above the glove box, if you’ve gotten in and stared at the dash wondering what’s missing)
2. The turn signal is on the right. No, your other right. That’s the windshield wipers. (posted on the windshield)

I think I’ll suggest those postings to the rental car company. Yep. They definitely need to add those to all cars from now on.

Working It

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Although I’m too early for this, the US and Australia have finally agreed on reasonable working holiday visas between the countries. (Before this, for an American to get a working-holiday visa here was not only logistically, but also financially, a huge pain…when many had to go through a program that cost over $1000)

Guess I have about three more years to make it back over here and make some Aussie dollars. Apparently food-harvesting jobs are pretty popular for the backpack variety…

The good news also means that I’m sure there will be more Aussies hopping over to the States in the next few years…and our own food-harvesters will have more access to legal migrant workers willing to spend their autumns (well, their springs, actually) picking the fruits in California…

Speaking of which…a move like this is a pretty sly way for the current government to work the domestic security issue. I mean, expanding working visa opportunities to citizens of countries that are low security risk (and white), the Republicans are limiting the number of low-demand jobs for the Latino migrant workers…so they’re pleasing their anti-immigrant wing while making it look like they’re being friendly toward other nations…

Smooth.

Please Come Again

Monday, September 17th, 2007

squeezing the White House

“You planned your trip perfectly!” one of my Aussie friends told me as soon as he heard when I’d landed in Sydney. And no, it wasn’t just because I’d get to watch all of the excitement of the footy finals; I’d also missed the “drama” that was the Leaders’ Week meeting of APEC on Sept. 8 and 9 (my flight landed on the morning of the 11th).

Most news stories I read flying into Sydney and on my first few days here, said it seemed Sydney-iders (is that what they’re called here?) weren’t too pleased with the lockdown of the city. And they all blamed, of course, attendee George W. Bush saying he’s the reason the local government went over the top in its security (including declaring Friday the 7th a public holiday to prepare for the street closures).

OK, I have to admit reading about some of the measures, even I thought they were a bit extreme. Still, though, I wasn’t baffled by them. I mean, I’ve been living in LA for the last four years. My roommates and I all taught in schools that at some point over our two-year time were on complete lock down — with students inside of them — for hours (and as classrooms have no toilets, I’ll let you think of how pleasant that is for the students and teachers). This past year I’d had my commute nicely lengthened when I’d been diverted on an hour-long detour around the airport so another action movie could be shot nearby. And for the past few years I’d been prohibited from driving near Hollywood and Highland for every week (yes, the entire week) leading up to the Academy Awards. And these are all just measures taken for run-of-the-mill people and the Hollywood crowd.

So was I surprised Sydney went a little crazy having many of the world’s leaders all in one place? No. But as I recently watched a small private aircraft fly freely right over the Aussie Prime Minister’s Sydney home recently, I realized that even though Sydney looks and acts a lot like SoCal, “I’m not in L.A. anymore.” So, yeah, it seems APEC gave the Aussies just one more thing to dislike about G-Dub.

They’ve Got the US Nailed

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

nail art in Phnom Penh

Thanks to my old job, I’ll probably stop to look at nail art for the rest of my life.

At a mall in Phnom Penh two days ago, I stopped to check out the art for one nail salon. Of course, they had lots of flowers and prints. But what I didn’t expect to see was a design incorporating the American flag. Really, are there a lot of Cambodian teens wanting to sport Old Glory on their nails?

Well, if not, they can always get the set with the Disney princesses…

Forget About It?

Monday, August 27th, 2007

photo Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi for travel blog

landscaper checks a tree trimming at the Temple of Literature

our tour guide waits for a few kayakers to return in Ha Long Bay

view from my hotel on Cat Ba Island

another view from my hotel on Cat Ba Island

In my first couple of months at the University of Missouri, I was quickly indoctrinated into the Missouri/Kansas rivalry. Although most of the rivalry is now just good-hearted sports competition, when I set foot in Lawrence for the yearly football game, I was reminded that there’s far more history between the schools than just football and basketball. Making my way into kU’s Memorial Stadium, we were accosted by little blue and red brats who snatched every piece of MU gear from us that they could…but they were nothing compared to the woman I met moments later. This 90ish-year-old woman (I’m not exaggerating) started yelling at us in the worst profanities possible, and she definitely wasn’t just talking smack about our quarterback. I couldn’t believe this woman, who was older than my grandma, could have such a foul vocabulary and such hatred for us Missourians. But she did.

When I later reflected on that experience, I realized that this woman grew up back when the rivalry was fresh. Although she had missed being born during the Civil War, she likely would’ve heard about the pre-war border battles throughout her childhood. (The MU/kU rivalry is rooted in the fact that Missouri was a slave state and Kansas was a free state and there were many attacks on each others’ soil — including the university cities…both universities’ mascots are named from their city’s actions before the Civil War — Columbians defending themselves from the free-state attacks called themselves Tigers, and the attackers from Lawrence were called Jayhawks because they were thieves, looters, and general ruffians) And so, although my first trip to Kansas in 1999 was more than 100 years after the end of the Civil War (in which both states had been in the Union), it seems it was a war that not all have forgotten.

Although this was a rare incidence in the Midwest, there are other Civil War memories living on in other parts of the States. Head up into any of the large northern cities, and you’d best never be wearing a Confederate flag…even as a “souvenir.” Or just try roaming through Georgia and the Carolinas spouting off how brilliant a man William Tecumseh Sherman was. Not wise, my friend.

So what does this have to do with my travels? Well, as I made my way through Vietnam, the locals all tried to reassure me that the war was over. It was history. All’s well. “We’re friendly now,” said Binh, the guide I had for the Cu Chi Tunnels. They all seem to want to forget the war (except to make money from it). But as I saw reminder after reminder of the war, I can’t believe it’s becoming a foggy memory. The accounts of the violence of the 60s and 70s aren’t hiding themselves anywhere, and there is still so much evidence of the north/south division in mindset.

The pictures throughout this post are photos I took in the north to send back to an ex-coworker who wanted to see what I’d see in his home country. This Vietnamese man had grown up in his country’s south and had never seen the north. I don’t know if he ever will, either. As with many southerners, a trip to Hanoi is still a political statement they aren’t eager to make. So seeing Hoan Kiem Lake or Ha Long Bay, isn’t something that they’re going to do.

Because try as we might, people don’t forget.

For me, that was why I felt I had to go to Vietnam. It was a place that my father had been, years ago…more than a decade before my birth and adoption, but it was a place that I can’t help but believe was a huge part in shaping the man I love and admire today. And it is his reluctance to remember that made me want to know. It was his avoidance of ever talking about the War that made me not talk to my parents for weeks, just so I wouldn’t have to tell them where I was. And it was my sadness for what he involuntarily saw and endured there that left me blinking back tears for the two hours I sat in the airport waiting to fly into Hanoi. And although I know I was probably more emotional than others, I know I’m not alone in wanting to remember. In Hanoi, I met an American guy whose grandfather was killed here; in Saigon, my American roommate’s father too was in the war and refused to talk about it. And at the Tunnels, an American veteran joined our tour as well. We were all there to remember or try to know why someone doesn’t want to remember.

And so, I don’t think we humans ever forget. We try. But sometimes that only makes the memories linger on beyond ourselves.

And try as Binh does, he can’t forget either. With the war 30 years in his past, he still drinks himself to sleep every night. He tries to erase the memories of the dead American soldiers whose first dog tag he slipped into their mouthes and the second he pocketed to send back to their families in the USA. But still he sees them. Alcohol only lasts for a while. When he’s awake the memories are there, and so fresh he can still sing along to the words of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” listened to by the American soldiers during the war.

And will his son, who never lived through the war, forget? Can he forget that his father saw more violence at age 18 than we will ever see in our lifetime? Can he forget that his father was sent away to a re-unification/re-education camp and used as a human land-mine clearing tool for years, only to return to his now-motherless family? Can he forget that, because of his southern ties, the only job his father could later get was as a tour guide…and was therefore daily forced to relive the horrors of war while laughing tourists pay a few dong to shoot machine guns off into the forest? I doubt it. And even though Binh tells me he never has talked to his son about the war, I’m sure his son will still remember it. And like some generations of Americans have carried scars from the 1800s, I’m sure many Vietnamese (and Americans) will bear these for years, too.

So it was for Binh, his son, my father, and everyone else who bears this history that I couldn’t forget or blink back my sadness anymore but wiped away tear after tear as I rode a bus out of Vietnam.

photo of Cat Ba Island for travel blog

A Quick Drink

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

Pepsi poster in Saigon for travel blog can of 7 Up in Hanoi
Two hours. That’s all it took to get Pepsi into Vietnam.

According to my southern-born Cu Chi Tunnels guide, two hours after President Bill Clinton lifted the trade embargo with Vietnam (1994), Pepsi was on the streets of Saigon, handing out samples of their soft drink. How effective was their planned launch? Well, I knew there was a reason I’d been able to get so much more 7 Up (which I just realized is a Pepsi product) in Vietnam and its communist neighbor Laos (where trade relations were often tied with Vietnam). Now I know why.

So, how long do you think it will take for American companies to move into the much-closer Cuba once that embargo finally goes bye-bye? Or, I guess the more obvious question is, how long do you think it will take for Cuban cigars to find their way into Wal-Mart?

Lost in T-ranslation

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

t-shirt

“Speak not what your country has done to you but what you have done to your country.”

This t-shirt for sale in a shop across from my guesthouse is either:
a) what happens when JFK is translated into a language then translated back to English
b) the product of a local t-shirt maker making a political statement

Who’s Your Daddy/Uncle?

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

restaurant in Hanoi

Attempting to follow my newest travel rule, I revisited a western bar/restaurant in Hanoi last night. I’d had pizza there before and while sitting at the bar I had noticed a small portrait of the original G. Dub next to the entrance. Given the rest of the posters in the place, I thought it was just another attempt at some American kitsch.

But last night, while sitting at a table and eating a grilled cheese, I looked up and realized there was a portrait of “Uncle Ho” on the other side of the door. Given the not-so-distant history between our two countries, I have to say I was fairly surprised at the juxtaposition.

Turns out the place is owned by an American man and Vietnamese woman (who are married). I guess the portraits are a little devotional to each of their country’s “founding fathers.”

And I do say little…as you can see the tributes to Jimi Hendrix and Jerry Garcia are much bigger.

restaurant posters

posters in R&R in Hanoi