Sunday, January 30, 2011

Why do we have weekends in the first place?

For many of us, the weekend is an integral part to the week, one that is eagerly looked forward to with the promises of lazy days and crazy nights.  But why do we have the weekend in the first place?  The answer is not as clear cut as one might think.

The concept of a day of rest goes as far back as the time of the Romans and the beginnings of Judaism.  Jews established the concept of the Sabbath according to the Biblical story of Creation, where God, after creating the world and everything on it, rested on the seventh day.  Saturday is traditionally considered to be the end of the Jewish week, and as such is observed with both celebration and prayer within the Jewish faith.  Additionally, the Roman emperor Constantine decreed in 321 A.D. that the dies Solis, or Day of the Sun, would be the official day of rest for the Roman people.  Celebrated on Sunday, the day was a day of rest for all Romans except for those in agricultural pursuits, since with agriculture the weather does not always allow for rest on a specific day.  

The modern form of the weekend has its roots with the rise of labor unions in the early 1900s.  Most labor unions, with the majority of their workers being Christian, were staunchly for the exclusion of Sunday from the work week, claiming it to be a divine day when God rested from creating Creation (the same reasoning as Jews gave for the Sabbath).  However, a sizable minority of laborers within the union were also Jewish, and for that reason they lobbied for the inclusion of Saturday into the weekend, in accordance with their religious beliefs.  It wasn't until 1929 that the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America was the first union to receive a five day work week, and most of the United States didn't get a five day work week until 1940.  

Given that most workers did not have a five-day work week until about 70 years ago, we should all make sure that we enjoy the weekend as much as possible.  So, the next time you are out on the town at 2 AM on Saturday night, make sure to give thanks that you will be able to sleep in the next day!

Sunday, January 16, 2011

The Mood Mixtapes: LavaLounge

As part of a recurring theme for this blog, I'm going to try and create a new mixtape for you to check out each month, with each mixtape attempting to capture a unique mood.  This month's mixtape focuses on the atmospheric effect one finds at a posh nightclub these days.  While the martinis may make you feel differently in the morning, the house and technopop music contained within this list will relax you and make you feel a little more posh inside.  Mood lighting preferred when listening to this list.  Here we go:

1.  Blue South - Afterlife
2.  Wait Till You See Him (De-Phazz Remix) - Ella Fitzgerald
3.  Alejandro (Dave Aude Mixshow) - Lady GaGa
4.  I Remember - Deadmau5 & Kaskade
5.  Little L - Jamiroquai
6.  It's Over (feat. Kanye West) - John Legend
7.  I Will Be Here (Wolfgang Gartner Remix) - Tiesto & Sneaky Sound System
8.  Manteca (Funky Lowlives Remix) - Dizzy Gillespie
9.  SexyBack (Pokerface Remix) - Justin Timberlake
10.  Aston Martin Music (feat. Drake) - Rick Ross 
11.  Sensual Seduction (Wideboys Club Mix) - Snoop Dogg
12.  Tangerine - Worldwide Groove Corporation
13.  Stereo Love - Edward Maya & Vika Jigulina
14.  G6 -n- Stuff (Inphinity Bootleg) - Deadmau5 vs. Far East Movement
15.  Sinnerman (Felix Da Housecat's Heavenly House Mix) - Nina Simone
16.  Hello, Good Morning (Chucky's Bad Boy Went Dirty Dutch Remix) - Dirty Money
17.  Mistake (Original Mix) - Trinity, M Lovers
18.  San Francisco Rain (feat. Mooli) - Lys
19.  4 Minutes (Bob Sinclar's Space Funk Remix) - Madonna & Justin Timberlake
20.  Move For Me - Deadmau5 & Kaskade
21.  Blossom (feat. JES) [Lounge Mix] - Steve Forte Rio
22.  Waking Up In Vegas (Manhattan Clique Bellagio Remix) - Katy Perry
23.  Sugar (feat. Wynter) [Disco Fries Remix] - Flo Rida
24.  I Hate This Part (Dave Aude Remix) - Pussycat Dolls
25.  How Soon Is Now (Extended Version) - David Guetta, Sebastian Ingrosso, Dirty South, & Julia McKnight

Thursday, January 13, 2011

After Oil: The Coming Crisis? (And What To Do About It)








Oil.  It runs our cars, it puts food on our tables, and it creates many of the machines that our society today takes for granted.  But oil is a finite resource, and eventually we must face the inevitable question:  What happens to us, and the rest of humanity, when oil runs out?

The concept of Peak Oil is based on the premise that at some point in the near future, oil production will reach a climax, after which dwindling resources and increased demand will raise the oil price to the point where it will be too expensive for the majority of individuals and business entities to afford to buy it.  We've already seen what effects spikes in the price of oil have had on the daily lives of Americans and others; many of the Baby Boomer generation can still remember waiting in line to get gas for their cars.  While lately we've been spoiled by reasonably cheap gasoline and diesel prices, it is foolish of us to expect those prices to remain stagnant for much longer.  Increasing demand in China, India, Indonesia, and elsewhere will begin to raise oil and gas prices for all of us in the next decade or sooner.

If this trend continues, cars will eventually be too expensive to drive around.  Law enforcement, fire, ambulance, and supply trucks will all cease to function, which will cripple the effectiveness of such services.  Without the supply trucks to bring food, medicines, and consumer items to stores, Americans will not have any readily available means of feeding themselves, clothing themselves, or keeping themselves healthy.  The fact that many Americans are living in car-driven suburbs only exacerbates the problem:  because they have to drive everywhere to obtain essential services, Americans in the suburbs will be effectively stranded once their cars cease to run.  Even our technology will become ineffective extremely quickly:  computers and microchips require oil to produce.  I'll leave you to your imagination as to what would happen next.  This breakdown will, of course, not come peacefully, and it will not be limited to the United States.  Other developing nations will be affected just as much,  if not more so, due to more limited resources.  I imagine that if a crisis like this were to unfold, the death toll would be astronomical before things began to stabilize. 

So, what are we to do about this coming crisis?  Believe it or not, we already have a blueprint for success (and for failure) in the event that oil becomes cost prohibitive, and it comes from a place that most people would not ordinarily think to look to for inspiration.  In the late 1980s, the Soviet Union suffered from massive budget imbalances and subsequently collapsed, and two countries that had become almost completely dependent on Soviet oil suddenly were nearly completely without that resource.  Those countries were North Korea and Cuba.  

(I'm going to turn the next two paragraphs over to mental_floss' blogger Ransom Riggs, who can explain what happened far more succinctly than I can)

"North Korea froze. Their political structure was far too rigid and they didn’t move quickly enough to address the crisis. They had this top-down food distribution system where most people got their groceries from the government — and when the oil stopped, and their economy collapsed, the food distributions stopped, too. People starved to death at an amazing rate. Something like three million people died. Kim Jong Il stationed army units in every town in the country just to collect and dispose of the bodies, but even they were overwhelmed. And even while this was going on, the North Korean government ordered many of its farmers to grow non-food crops, like opium poppies, for export.
Cuba, on the other hand, responded quickly. Food production went local. It was mandated that every bit of arable land in Havana be used to grow crops. As a result, they made it through the collapse, and now the Cubans are eating better than ever — they have plentiful, organic, locally-farmed food, which is more than even many Americans have."
To be fair, however, the story of Cuba's success does come with one major caveat:  that Cuba is a relatively small island nation.  While it is restricted from trade with the US, Cuba was able to receive aid from other nations to help smooth its transition after it lost its source of oil.  But in a worldwide crisis, who is there to provide aid to other countries when every country on the planet has to deal with its own set of problems?
Regardless, it seems to me that a reasonable solution in the event of an oil crisis is to downsize:  make communities more walkable and accessible, rely on local produce and livestock to provide for community needs, and become more self-sufficient.  The communities that manage to convert to a more sustainable lifestyle sound like the ones who will best be able to weather this crisis and prosper afterwards.  
In the end, whether you believe in the Peak Oil crisis or not, we can all agree that downsizing certain aspects of our lives would probably be beneficial to us in more ways than not.  If nothing else, more exercise from walking more places and less time spent on phones, computers, ipods, and televisions would be beneficial to our mental and physical well-being.  Interaction with others on a personal level, rather than through video screens and audio devices, may also help to foster communication and more cooperation between community members.  These changes are well within our means to achieve, if only we put our minds to them.
Hmm.  Looks like Karl Marx might have gotten something right after all.

Monday, January 3, 2011

One Less Rainbow: The End of Kodachrome

Sorry for the lack of posts lately; the New Year festivities have kept me otherwise occupied.

For those of you who can remember back to the days before digital cameras (which should be most of you), buying rolls of film and getting them developed was a process.  With the advent of .gif files and USB cables, film began to go the way of the dinosaur.  And now, one of the icons of photography, Kodachrome film, is set to become Dodo-ized.  According to this article in the New York Times, a family photography center by the name of Dwayne's Photo has become the last film processor to offer the service in the country.

Officially, Kodak stopped making Kodachrome in 2009, but now that the only place in the country to process them is going out of business, Americans of all walks of life have been rushing to get their last rolls of film to the shop.  The last photo is slated to be a picture of the employees of Dwayne's Photo, outside the shop before it's demolished.  Get your film in now, or you could be waiting on those photos to be processed for a long, long time.