Picking the wrong fight

In the U.S., instead of getting mad at the super-rich, who enjoy low tax rates (lower than many of us!), and instead of pointing a finger at our out of control defense budget, many people choose to get mad at the middle class public sector employees like teachers and government workers, rather than holding their job benefits up as an example to which private companies should aspire. By all means, scrutinize the six-figure pensions earned by firefighters, police officers, and politicians, but don’t scapegoat the average state worker, who in New Jersey is paid less than $20K per year in pension funds. And don’t forget, pensions are deferred income that were funded in part by employees’ own contributions.

Four Tops on Soul Train

Just found this awesome video of the Four Tops singing “Keeper of the Castle” on Soul Train in 1972. The best part is at minute 1:07 when you can see a guy on the bottom left doing the robot. The dancing in general is great. Yes, there was dancing in America before rap and to 40, and it was more interesting 

Being young in Europe: ‘surreal and ultimately sad’

The second sentence in this article about lack of opportunities for young adult Europeans is pretty heavy stuff for a New York Times lead:

LECCE, Italy — Francesca Esposito, 29 and exquisitely educated, helped win millions of euros in false disability and other lawsuits for her employer, a major Italian state agency. But one day last fall she quit, fed up with how surreal and ultimately sad it is to be young in Italy today.


The rest of the article rings pretty true on this side of the Atlantic, as well.

It galled her that even with her competence and fluency in five languages, it was nearly impossible to land a paying job. Working as an unpaid trainee lawyer was bad enough, she thought, but doing it at Italy’s social security administration seemed too much. She not only worked for free on behalf of the nation’s elderly, who have generally crowded out the young for jobs, but her efforts there did not even apply to her own pension.

Question to readers: to what degree do you think this article rings true in the U.S.?

Comic Sans is funny

This year, WordPress is making suggestions each day for a topic bloggers should write about if they choose to take the post-a-day challenge. Yesterday’s topic was “who deserves more credit than they get?” I’m going to answer that, but I’m going to change this to a thing.

Comic Sans, the ubiquitous Microsoft font, (one I associate with middle-aged female office managers in Indiana) gets a bad rap, but it has inspired some very funny creations, and I think deserves more credit than it gets. There is the McSweeney’s article, written in the voice of the maligned font; a PSA of sorts for the “Comic Sans Criminal;” and, my personal favorite, this YouTube video of Hitler learning that his “marketing team” chose to do up its latest advertising campaign with Comic Sans font (Featuring the widely-used clip from Downfall).

Hipsters in 2011

Today, January 2, 2011, I am going to revisit a post I wrote almost six years ago, because it still manages to get more page views than some of my current posts. It’s about hipsters, which apparently is a popular search term on the google. But what I wrote is so hopelessly out-of-date that it makes me wonder if either hipsters have evolved dramatically since 2004 or I was just really off the ball. Here’s what I mean:

In 2004, I said Hipsters

Shops at: Urban Outfitters, Salvation Army

2011 commentary: Urban Outfitters? Really?

Reads: David Sedaris, Zadie Smith, Dave Eggers, Salon.com

2011 commentary: Hipsters read books?

Listens to: Rufus Wainwright, Elephant 6, Stereolab, emo

2011 commentary: Emo? Maybe 12-year-old hipsters. But seriously, I don’t think Pitchfork has mentioned any of these musicians for at least three years.

Wears: Newsboy hat, horn-rimmed glasses, Vans, Blazers, Uggs (though starting to wear Uggs in irony)

2011 commentary: I can be forgiven for the fashion being way off

But seriously, I don’t really know how to characterize what hipsters wear or do. I know they still exist because I see them when I go to Williamsburg. And I’ll admit, I don’t have as visceral a dislike of them as maybe I used to, or as so many non-hipsters seem to. They’re just people, people! Happy New Year’s!

2010 in review

WordPress just emailed me a pretty cool summary about the number of visitors to my blog in 2010. Does Tumblr do that? (Maybe it does, I don’t know).

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 7,800 times in 2010. That’s about 19 full 747s.

 

In 2010, there were 33 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 1141 posts. There was 1 picture uploaded, taking a total of 993kb.

The busiest day of the year was January 6th with 181 views. The most popular post that day was Entrepreneurialism is not the drive to accumulate wealth.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were facebook.com, Google Reader, search.aol.com, nyceducator.com, and twitter.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for matisse paintings, richard hatch, why am i here, anti hipster, and elaine meyer.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Entrepreneurialism is not the drive to accumulate wealth August 2009
2 comments

2

The Anti-Hipster Crusade March 2004
4 comments

3

Social immaturity October 2007
7 comments

4

About June 2007
3 comments

5

Socio-economic stratification in higher education February 2008
5 comments

Too Proud to Beg?

In the middle of reading this New York Times article about the sad story of a town whose workers lost their pensions, I stopped at this quote, about one of the people who was affected and ended up dying, because he was also too young to collect Social Security:

“When they found him, he had no electricity and no running water in his house,” said David Anders, 58, a retired district fire chief. “He was a proud enough man that he wouldn’t accept help.”

There is something so sad and deluded and kind of American about the idea that someone who does not try to get help from the government when in a dire situation is being proud or honorable. I hate to say it, because this man’s situation was awful and could happen to any of us in these tenuous times, but it is stupid not to try to get help from the government if you have been rendered destitute. This country’s largest automakers recently got help from the government, as did its largest banks. Individuals get help from the government every day, in the form of disability checks, welfare, unemployment benefits, tax exemptions on home mortgage interest, free school lunches, etc. We pay taxes in part to insure ourselves if we fall into hard times, so we can collect say, Medicaid or disability. I don’t consider this man “too proud;” I consider him sadly deluded about how things work in this country.

Another way to think of it is that Americans — even those who are too proud to go to the government — do go to banks to borrow money in hard times. Most people are not too proud to do that, and many of them, even if they feel like they will eventually pay down the debt, are frankly not in a position to do it. So maybe it is best for someone who considers himself or herself above collecting government welfare to think about whether it is better to be psychologically indebted to his or her fellow Americans or actually indebted to a bank that charges an 18% interest rate.

A good year for AIDS research (Year in review)

With yesterday’s announcement that a man was cured by doctors in Germany of AIDS, it has been as good a year for the disease as the world has seen in awhile. Earlier this year, scientists at CAPRISA showed there was a 39% reduction in new HIV infections for women who used what is called a microbicide vaginal gel. Not long after, another group of scientists found that men who take a daily anti-retroviral pill called Truvada reduced their chance of infection at varying rates (from 44 to 90 percent), depending on how often they took the pill.

Earlier this year, I started working at Columbia University’s epidemiology department (which has on its faculty some of the CAPRISA doctors), so it is very exciting to be some place where this research is front and center. On a personal level, a relative of mine died of AIDS many years ago, and I remember being baffled as an eight-year-old by the thought of a disease that couldn’t be cured, living as I was during one of the best eras of public health for developed countries (no flu epidemics, typhoid, etc.).

Yet, the AIDS news, as good as it is raises some questions. My main question about the cure that was found is whether many people would elect to go through it, instead of anti-retroviral treatment. Because it was a bone marrow transplant for leukemia, it is pretty intense:

It involves destroying the person’s native immune system with powerful drugs and radiation, then replacing it with donor cells to grow a new immune system.

Anyway, it has been a good year for AIDS as far as science goes. Hopefully public health prevention efforts will still get the funding and attention they deserve, in a climate where the perception that AIDS has been cured has not yet matched the reality.

A Month of Tracking My Subway Rides

This morning, after a particularly unacceptable rush hour subway experience that made my friend Lyz one hour late for work, we decided we would start keeping track of our daily subway rides for the next month, and, at month’s end, let the MTA know about all of the indignities we had experienced — from delays to impossibly slow-moving trains to long waits.

It’s true that the MTA already knows about these frustrations, in fact, it sanctioned them with its brutal budget cuts earlier this year. But the fun of this exercise is to try to get a sense of just how bad the MTA has gotten, and whether, when we complain about the subway, we really have adequate perspective. Are we dwelling on the few infuriating rides we’ve had and ignoring all of the times we made it from Point A to Point B without even noticing, or are our commutes filled with consistent head-banging frustration?

I’m particularly attuned to such frustrations, because my commute is pretty brutal. I recently started a new job at Columbia University Medical Center, which requires me to commute from Kensington, Brooklyn, to Washington Heights, Manhattan. That means I ride the train across about one-third of Brooklyn and most of Manhattan twice a day. (My commute used to be much shorter, from Kensington to Union Square in Manhattan). I might move, but for now, I’m riding about one hour and ten minutes each way, from Church Ave (F line) to 168th Street (A line) with a mercifully easy switch at Jay Street in Brooklyn.

Anyway, without further ado, I give you my experience of today, Nov. 30:

The morning got off to a bad start. I arrived on the Church Ave. platform at about 7:25, as the G train, which starts here, was showing no signs of moving. For some reason when the G starts up here, it always takes the train conductors forever to get the train going, or to switch, if one conductor is relieving another. So I waited for about five minutes as the G sat there. Finally, it left, and the F came right after. The rest of the commute was amazingly quick and painless. I had a seat almost the whole way on both the F and the A (which basically clears out after it’s gone through the Wall Street-area stops). The train got to 168th St. at 8:25, which is seriously a record. Not so bad.

Evening commute: I arrived at the 168th Street stop at about 5 p.m. As I was walking through the station, an announcer said a Brooklyn-bound A train — my train — was approaching the station. Like many other rabid commuters, I increased my pace to a swifter walk-jog to try to make it to the platform to catch the train. When I got downstairs, the train was just arriving at the station, but it was empty and not stopping. So much for that train. About five minutes later, the announcer told us the next train coming was not serving customers. Two trains in a row were out of service?! But as the train pulled up, it was pretty full, and stopped to pick us up. So it in fact was serving customers.

As the train moved south, toward 125th, it started slowing down intermittently, as I’ve found it often does during this particular stretch of the commute. These train slowdowns I think are caused by signal or track issues, but I’m not really sure. Either way, there is something infuriating about them, especially when you’re on an express train.

The rest of the ride was pretty smooth, except for several failed attempts to close the doors at the Fulton Street/Broadway-Nassau stop in downtown Manhattan. At 5:45, I was at Jay Street waiting to transfer to the F. The platform was crowded with people, suggesting the train was taking awhile to come. I always have wishful thinking that the train will arrive right away when I come into this situation, but I actually had to wait five more minutes for it to come. About three minutes into the wait, an announcer informed us that the delay owed to a passenger who had gotten sick at Broadway-Lafayette. The funny thing is, I had almost the exact same experience yesterday with no announcement about a delay. The F has just been terrible at running frequently at around 5:45, when I’m waiting for it at Jay Street.

I got off at about 5:55 at 4th Ave.-9th Street to head to the gym in Park Slope. Not a great train ride, but could have been worse.

What it is about 20-somethings

This upcoming Sunday Times’ Magazine article called “What is it about 20-somethings?” is sure to be a must-read among people my age, if the number of my friends who have it on their gchat status is any indication. The article looks at the trend among people in their 20s of putting off the milestones that characterize adulthood, like starting a career, a family or buying a house. Author Robin Marantz Henig profiles a psychologist who believes the 20s is a distinct stage of life for the brain, one which he calls “emerging adulthood,” because it falls between adolescence and adulthood. Unfortunately, because Henig focuses so singularly on his work, and doesn’t actually feature any 20-somethings prominently in the article, she offers little insight into why my generation isn’t getting married or starting careers as quickly as we used to. My own opinion, based on my own life and the lives of people I know, is that there are a few pretty simple reasons, and that the trend is class-based. While members of various classes may all be starting their adulthood later, it is for different reasons.

One reason is student loans. A lot of people have a lot of student loans from expensive colleges and grad programs. It is scary to start a family on loans. A second reason is that there are fewer stable careers available and more turnover. People do not generally work their way up company ladders anymore, in part because they reach ceilings above which stand people with masters degrees (which help one advance, even if not actually worthwhile) or because their jobs lack the sort of benefits that jobs used to have, like pensions, accrued vacation time and good health care plans. Also, people work so hard that they get burned out and feel the best thing to do is leave for greener pastures. And there is no way in heck it’s a good idea to buy a house in one’s 20s right now unless you’re one of the wealthy few, want to live in a cheap subdivision that has been battered by the housing crisis, or have somehow saved up a lot of money.

As the article suggests, delayed adulthood is also inspired by the numerous choices many twenty-somethings have, or feel they have, after college, whether to travel abroad, volunteer at home or Teach for America. But this is limited to a pretty small group who tend to have gone to the elite universities.

For me, the present uncertainty above all is why I’m delaying certain adulthood milestones, particularly, getting married, having children and buying a house. But at this point, I’m not even certain that it would be worth going after them, after reading so much about the instability that resulted from people’s efforts to buy themselves stability, in the form of homes, expensive higher educations and the like. At this uncertain point in history, it may make more sense to take a different path, one that eschews the false markers of adulthood and embraces the real ones, like self-reliance and shrewd risk-taking. It is a direction at least I’m willing to move toward.

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