November 11

Thank you to the veterans. What we really need is to help improve social services for veterans and their families; but take a moment to think about what they have done for us all.

Also: on the day of World War I’s armistice, with next year the 100th anniversary of the start of WW I, take a moment to think about a world without war.

Also, not to say that we don’t acknowledge veterans, but it takes all of us to help each other; so I thought that this was an interesting article by vet Alex Horton on The Atlantic, including how he considered the perspective of World War II veterans (who transformed culture even if it took 60 years to have a memorial for their war; sometimes it’s not about the public acknowledgement – you can have history for that – but it’s about what you do):

I once talked to a World War II veteran about the experience of attending college after coming home, and asked if it was jarring to sit next to those who never served. I wondered if veterans huddled together under the umbrella of mutual understanding and thought less of civilians who never shouldered a rifle. His answer was surprising. They were proud of their time in uniform, he said, but for many, the war interrupted their lives, and education was a return to normalcy. Instead of a victory lap, they were more interested in getting back on track.

Perhaps the fact that many Iraq and Afghanistan veterans I’ve talked to take precisely the opposite view is due, in part, to current civilian attitudes. I call it the pedestal problem.

Horton further notes:

That’s the problem with viewing something on a pedestal: you can only see one side at a time, and rarely at depth. It produces extremes—the valiant hero or the downtrodden, unstable veteran.

Thank you for your service. But we’re looking for someone else.

The view from the pedestal has warped the perspective many veterans hold when they leave the service. We call ourselves warriors and worship the Spartan ethos, but don’t always appreciate that our society is detached from our conflicts the way Sparta never was. [….]

The place to begin is to understand ourselves [as veterans] — and what we need to begin defining success after we leave the service. In addition, our society should be less concerned with freebie giveaways and boilerplate op-eds on Veterans Day, and more concerned about how to provide opportunities for our veterans to flourish after their service.” (emphasis added)

Worth a read.

In the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines, here are ways to help.

A lot of food for thought on this day.

(cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

Not in Kansas City November 2013

triscribe’s FC and a crew of the Asian American Bar Association of New York (AABANY) are at the NAPABA convention in Kansas City, land of the bbq. (pardon the abbreviations; we’re lawyers).  FC noted on his Facebook – as did AABANY on the AABANY blog: Judge Denny Chin and AABANY’s historical trial re-enactments – including the newest one, “22 Lewd Chinese Women,” done at the NAPABA convention in Kansas City – got covered by NPR! (so law and bbq are perfect together). (also: I’m sorry to miss the fun, you guys). FC is quite prominent in the photo there.

Meanwhile, I’m plowing ahead with this year’s National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) project.  I didn’t plan ahead nearly as much as in previous years (work, work, work, trying not to think about work, work).  This year, the aim is just to write fiction and to feel good about fiction, since I haven’t done very much fiction writing for awhile and my legal (work) writing (such as it is) is tiring me out.  Writing in a genre that I usually don’t write – fantasy – has been a challenge.  So far, I have a psychic and some fortune-telling, a prophecy that the world will end, a search for the “Elixir of Elysium” and an FBI special agent who’s sort of wondering why is he in this. Oh, and now there’s about to be a murder (since I seem to need a reminder that I’ve written murder mysteries and those can be more fun, in some ways).  Hmmm.

I’m somewhat blogging about my NaNo project over at my tumblr.

In Brooklyn, we’ve apparently been very excited to see “Elementary” filming in the area.  I liked that the show returned Sherlock’s brother, Mycroft.  Also: they did the latest episode on Silver Blaze! This is all making me want to reread the classic Holmes stories.

Still hoping that “Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD,” via the people of Joss Whedon, will keep going (ABC gave it a full season, so…).  I think the latest episode was an improvement. I wanted to hug Agent Phil Coulson, the man who came back from the dead from “The Avengers” (yes, yes, big spoiler, but since so many of us saw “The Avengers” movie, get over it).  I like Phil, and actor Clark Gregg has really pushed the angle with Phil’s toughness and professionalism and… yep, humanity, and not wanting to face the real trauma (like, oh, death and maybe not being afraid about that).

The hard part is building the relationships and getting to the humanity – the stuff that superhero stories don’t nearly get to cover enough (unless you count the countless times of “Let’s keep torturing Batman!”).  Since Agents of SHIELD is about the people who are basically the support staff to the superheroes (with their own adventures besides just cleaning up after The Avengers), they should try to cover more, not just be X-File-like or Alias-like or Fringe-ish.  Come on, Agents of SHIELD, keep at it!  You can do it!

(bear in mind, Whedon’s tv shows have a slow go.  “Buffy” moved quickly to establish the friendship of Buffy, Willow, and Xander, but high school and monsters kind of make that kind of thing happen).

To be airing on PBS: Hugh Jackman in “Oklahoma!” (link to the story coverage over on Entertainment Weekly’s website).  I could have sworn that PBS had shown this years ago, but they’re showing it again as part of a fall arts festival this month (last night was “Company” with Neil Patrick Harris, Stephen Colbert, etc.). “Great Performances” is the umbrella show airing the musicals.

I wish PBS would take more stuff out of ye olde archives – they’ve got tons of good stuff (oh, and it’s almost pledge time, so…)

Oh, and in sports: Boston Red Sox won the World Series, which we in New York City might just have to say “congrats.”  The New York City Marathon 2013 was great – things are so much better without a hurricane.  And the NY Giants have won two games so far.  Yay.  Columbia football has so far not yet won a game. Ugh.

On to the next thing…

One Year Later: Superstorm Sandy and Stuff

Time flies.  Here are some of our posts from the results of Superstorm Sandy:

The eve of Sandy (with more presidential campaign and Star Trek anniversary coverage than anything else – and a little sports and a reminder of how Gangnam Style captured our imagination.

Some of FC’s photos of the local gas station, the lines for supplies, and the return of the subway.

The days after

WNYC has special series on Life After Sandy.

Oh, and according to Time Out NY, MTA is going to be nice to mass transit riders on the anniversary of Sandy; free rides for riders on the A and R? Cool!

I’m not sure of the full effects, because in so many ways, we’re still feeling it (R and G subway tunnels’ repairs are ongoing, as far as NYC goes, and I shake my head about South Street Seaport, since change is change, when the storm just made the change go faster; and the effects on public housing is horrid, because these were buildings that didn’t get nearly enough help before Sandy in the first place).  Infrastructure investments and many other implications are not stuff we’re facing, but then again, are expectations too high, too low, too whatever?