Intimidation, part two

I got in front of her and slowed again.  This time when she passed me I took a look at the young man beside her.  They were about the same age, nothing particularly remarkable about either of them. He also looked worried.  

It was nice to be able to put faces on the stalkers, but I wanted to know a little more, like location.  So now it was my turn to follow the SUV.  Although the SUV was at times ripping along far faster than I wanted to drive, I was able to keep them in sight since there wasn’t much traffic.  I followed them to a town on South 101, saw which exit they took, caught up to them at a stop sign, (and wrote down the license number), and let them lead me to the house where the young man got out (nice gnomes, but watch out for that speed bump.)  The young woman drove on a few more blocks and pulled in at a nice house with a joyful dog (I’d guess an Aussie, but what do I know?)  

I drove up to the corner, wrote down the name of the intersecting streets, and retraced my way back to the freeway.

(to be continued)

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Intimidation

I had an interesting experience today.  I drove up to the nearby city to run a couple of errands.  It seemed everywhere I went I was meeting the same SUV, to the point that I figured it might be following me.  (There’s precedence for this: see the post “Surveillance” on my old blog dated June 1, 2010.  http://translight3.blogspot.com/2010_06_01_archive.html  ) All I could tell about the driver from the distance was that she was grinning.

There’s something intimidating about the big anonymous car stalking you, even when the SUV is the color of clay.  Just look at how often that image is used in action/thriller movies – the unsuspecting protagonist skips up the steps to her front door while the big car with dark windows slides by on the other side of the street.  Unsettling. 

I don’t like being unsettled.  So on the way home when I found that same SUV behind me on the freeway, I slowed until it passed me.  After the SUV slid back into the right lane a short way in front of me, I pulled into the left lane, sped up and came even with the driver’s window.  The driver was a small young Latina, and when she saw me staring at her, her face took on an expression of stress, concern, dare I say fear? 

She was afraid of me?  Me in my own little car minding my own business until she kept following me me? 

(to be continued)

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Citizen Corporation Goes to Turkey

Location of Elazığ Province

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Citizen Corporation went to Turkey and started a delivery service.   Since Citizen Corporation wanted to take home lots and lots of money so he could buy another BMW, he didn’t pay his employees in Turkey very much. He didn’t care that these employees were very poor and lived in desperate conditions. He didn’t even care that not one of them owned even one BMW. 

Employees who were unhappy with low wages, over-long hours, no job security or benefits, and other bad working conditions tried to start a union so they could negotiate for better conditions.  Citizen Corporation fired every union organizer,  and encouraged intimidation by the police.  This made people in Turkey very sad and upset at people from the US.  Tell me, class, was this an example of good citizenship?  No it was not.  Bad Citizen Corporation!   

The United Auto Workers Union in the US learned about the abuse by Citizen Corporation and sent the fired Turkish employees some money and a message:   “We stand with you!”    Good Citizen Union!                      

“UAW Supports Victimized Workers in Turkey”   
Solidarity Nov-Dec 2010     www.uaw.org         

International Trade Union Confederation   http://www.ituc-csi.org/spotlight-interview-with-kenan.html?lang=en

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Empathy and Compassion

Santi di Tito’s famous portrait of Niccolò Mac...

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Lately I’ve been reading the word “empathy” used where I believe the term “compassion” would apply. Here are the definitions in my dictionary (The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, fourth edition.)

Empathy:  identification with and understanding of another’s situation, feelings, and motives. 

Pity: sympathy and sorrow aroused by the misfortune or suffering of another. 

Compassion: deep awareness of the suffering of another, coupled with the wish to relieve it

According to these definitions, I could emphasize with Karl Rove’s need to funnel millions of dollars into the electoral process in order  to grab power for the ultra-right.  After all, he is Machiavellian. It’s the nature of the beast, and I can understand his motives by pretending to stand where he stands.  He wants power. The things he does are designed to fill that need.  That doesn’t mean his situation arouses in me either a sense of pity or compassion, and I certainly don’t feel compelled to relieve his suffering.

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Citizen Corporation

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“On January 21, 2010, with its ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court ruled that corporations are persons.”  www.movetoamend.org 

In January five Supreme Court justices told us corporations are citizens of the United States, with all the rights of citizens like you and me.  I am not familiar enough with the ruling to know whether that means just corporations owned entirely by shareholders in the US, or if a majority of the shareholders can reside in other countries like China or Saudi Arabia.  No matter.  It is our duty to welcome these citizen corporations into the neighborhood and let them exercise their constitutional rights. 

What I remember from grade school, however, is that citizenship entails not just rights, but also responsibilities.  Remember that “Citizenship” line on your report card?   Students who were good citizens during the quarter received an “A.” Problem students who created trouble for others got something less, and parents were supposed to  correct the problem behavior. 

So what kind of citizens are corporations?  Do they contribute to the well-being of the class, or do they throw spit-wads on the ceiling when the teacher isn’t looking? 

BevMo is a corporation.  BevMo decided to maximize profits for shareholders by eliminating full-time employees and replacing them with part-time workers who have no health benefits.  Is this good citizenship?  Does this help the community in our classroom?  Sorry BevMo, for this year your citizenship grade is D minus.  http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20100813005941/en/BevMo-Workers-Demand-Fairness-Company-Responds-Hiring

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The “Tri” in Trilogy

Part III, Encounter Darkness, is payback time for Daron, but Kate struggles to turn the tables.  While the escalating feud propels Kate’s aptitude for mischief to new levels, it also pushes her into a moral darkness she may not escape.

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Quick Summary of Part Two

In Vaporous Night, part two of the trilogy, Kate spins a tale that sends Daron on a wild goose chase for a time machine. Her plan to use this as an opportunity to flee the madman is foiled, however, since Daron insists on taking Kate along for the hunt. When Daron discovers it’s all a hoax, his disillusionment and humiliation do not bode well for Kate.

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How to Walk in Waltz Time

In Light Thickens, the protagonist is described as “walking in ¾ time” or waltz time.  But Kate isn’t just walking, she’s skimming along “up to tempo” – as in moving rapidly.   

Some people might think a waltz is a slow dance, but we’re talking The Sleeping Beauty Waltz here, where the conductor marks only the first beat of each measure because trying to mark all three beats would have his hands waving like those of a camper caught in the middle of a mosquito swarm. 

So why does Kate walk in three-four time?  (Three steps to every measure, the first beat of each measure marked by a longer stride. ) First there’s the thematic element, adding to the number of references to the number three included in the story.  It also indicates Kate walks to a different drummer, a little out of step with the  people around  her.  That makes the action character development. 

The real reason, however,  is I discovered long ago it’s an efficient way to walk fast, since I have a slight limb-length discrepancy.   If I don’t walk in three-four time, the left stride is always shorter than the other, and over distance I veer to the left.  Concentrating on making the left stride longer is fatiguing and wears on the joints. (Fighting the tendency to veer sometimes made me so tense it seemed I was forgetting how to walk at all.) 

But when one walks in three-four  time, the longer stride on the first beat of each measure alternates between left and the right, and the muscles are worked equally.  It’s a fluid way of moving fast, especially if you hum a waltz on the way.

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A Fast Over-View of Light Thickens

Light Thickens, part one of the trilogy, establishes the conflict between grad student Kate Sanger, a skilled teller of tall tales, and Kurt Daron, a dangerous derelict with technology from the future. After Kate rescues a smuggled Australian koala in Istanbul, she discovers the smuggler wants it back.  Then she is confronted by the smuggler’s pursuer, Daron, who wants something else altogether. Confused by Kate’s slight-of-hand, Daron thinks he can force Kate to reveal the secret of time travel by threatening her with death. Kate thinks the only way to stay alive is to act as if she knows that secret.

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