RMC Photo Essays
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
 
this is an audio post - click to play
 
 
this is an audio post - click to play
 
Monday, September 19, 2005
  Help From India
Had a very busy time making DVD's and many "computer issues", to deal with today. Finally ended the day talking with an HP service tech in India, and got excellent assistance. I have found the technical assistance folks in India, and other foreign countries to be very knowledgable and eager to help solve problems. They're paid a small fraction of what our techs are paid, and are worth far more. My Republican, corporate brother tries to tell me that it's fine for our companies to underpay them because they're better off making something than nothing. There's much more to this story but I'm too tired to go into it tonight. Suffice it to say that these good people in foreign lands are learning our technology while being underpaid, and this will come back to haunt us in just few years.
 
Sunday, September 18, 2005
 

Temple Terrace
RMC Photos
 
 

Fall afternoon in Florida.
RMC Photos
 
  Swamp Flower
This is a beautiful and fragile flower found in swamps. I'll find more of them on my walk today. I like how friendly and relaxed folks are when they're walking and enjoying nature. I contrast their friendly greetings and smiles with the unfriendly avoidance and anxiety I see in malls, or when folks drive too fast on the highways.
 
  Spanish Explorers
Amazing to think about men being here hundreds of years ago and just as alive and vital as we are today. Wish I could talk with them about what they saw and thought then. I'll bet it was quieter then and much less polluted. They found no gold here, but they sure found natural beauty some of which we still enjoy today.
 
Friday, September 16, 2005
  Night Life
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/weed/interesting/show/
 
Later at night
When all is quiet and calm
I explore the world
 
Haiku by RMC
 
  Katrina Thoughts
It will be folly to rebuild New Orleans, but it will still be done for reasons of pride, ego, sentiment, politics, profit and more. No amount of money and effort can build a city on the coast in a marsh that can withstand the force of a Category 5 hurricane. It's impossible. However, it's a risk that will be taken just as a new World Trade Center will be built which will again tempt terrorists. It seems to me that in many ways our world is in an inevitable downward spiral. Karl Menninger wrote many years ago in Man Against Himself that humans have an urge to self destruct, and that we all seek our own demise as a moth is drawn to a flame. I think we do so as individuals and in groups as in WW II Germany and Japan did and we may be doing now.

Human nature can improve, in my opinion. Human nature can grow. Human nature can be educated. It can also be contaminated by selfishness, by aggressiveness, and by revenge. Most people are not mean for amusement. Most people who are violent, most people who are aggressive, are simply acting in adult form what they learn as children.
- Karl Menninger

Most people are other people.
Their thoughts are someone else's opinions,
their lives a mimicry,
their passions a quotation
- Oscar Wilde
 
  Waking Up To High Tech
In the past few years I have worked in two major political campaigns. In one of them I contributed photography and computer expertise including many days of data base instruction and set up. In the other, my photography was used and I offered computer, web site and data base assistance, but my offer of free work was ignored. The first candidate won and the second lost by a wide margin. No inferences, but it is what happened.

I have worked in campaigns for people in the Tampa Bay area going back to the 70's when I came out of the military. I communicate extremely well using high tech tools, and in simple low tech ways like writing and speaking, and rarely fail at any endeavor. I've recommended good web sites, web casts, blogs, podcasts, DVD's and other ways of communicating with many folks for many causes, but it has mostly been to no avail. I am constantly amazed at how reluctant most politicians (Democrats only as I am a Yellow Dog Dem) seem to be to using modern, high tech resources in their campaigns. Here's a recent experience:

A few days ago I was introduced to some folks who are conducting a campaign for a state wide office. I know the candidate because I worked in her husband's campaign. I spoke to her briefly, and she referred me to her aide. I went to the aide and told her I could make a DVD about the candidate which could be used to communicate and promote her candidacy throughout the state. Another person in the office excitedly asked if I could also build a web site and I said I could but was primarily there to talk about making a DVD. The aide asked me for a quote for my services, and I told her that without knowing anything at all about what they wanted or needed it was difficult to give an accurate one. I was also asked about the cost of DVD reproduction.

I returned to my office, researched DVD repro costs of various companies and found some very economical and satisfactory prices. Then I emailed the aide and told her I could make a DVD on-site in one week for $2,000, and build a web site on-site for $2,000. Their response was that they were not ready to start anything now, and would get back to me in a month or two. It seems to me that for this campaign, as for others, time is of supreme essence, and there should be a greater sense of urgency. It was my impression from our initial and very brief meeting that they were eager to at least have a web site as soon as possible, but I guess they aren't or else think my proposed fees are too high. I will not find out because I later told them I am committed to other projects, and can't predict if I'll be available to do theirs if and when they decide they want it.

The bottom line is that if I had offered to work for free as I have in the past I might already be working with - not for - them, but when I gave them a proposal with a price as they requested, they chose to delay or disregard my offer which is their prerogative. If they had accepted my proposal I would have contributed some valuable photography to them from the projects, and I hope they win the election.
 
  The Commttee for Fair Elections (CFE)
This entry is a brief story of inadequate management by many folks who could do better work. It's about a petition drive which is being conducted under the auspices of The Commttee for Fair Elections (CFE). Here's a link to their web site: http://www.committeeforfairelections.com/

CFE description (from their web site)

The Committee for Fair Elections is a nonpartisan state political committee advocating for the creation of fair districts in Florida.

The Committee is organizing a citizen petition drive to fix the way voting district lines are drawn in Florida. The Committee's initiatives will remove politicians from the process and create standards that will act as guidelines for the creation of fair voting districts in time for the 2008 elections.

Over 750,000 signatures need to be collected by the end of December 2005. Then, citizens will have the opportunity to restore a real voice to Florida's voters in the November 2006 elections by voting for the Committee's redistricting reform proposals.

My observations and comments:

CFE's petition drive has been going on for months now, but I was told in early September that 100,000's of petitions are still needed to meet their deadline. I figure they will need about 30,000 correctly signed petition forms a week to meet a 12/31/2005 deadline. Good luck, as there's just a little more than three months left to meet their goal.

Months ago, I met the person in charge of the CFE office in Tampa and offered, at no charge, to make an informative and instructional DVD explaining the purpose and meaning of the petitions, and how to sign them correctly. The DVD could have then been sent to all 67 counties in Florida. It would have included text, audio and video with comments and instructions from the leaders of the effort shown on the CFE web site, and from their paid staffers charged with the task of collecting the signed petitions. After initially expressing strong interest, the woman in charge of their headquarters office seemed to lose all interest in my offer, but did not have the courtesy to tell me. She kept telling me that she wasn't ready to give me the information necessary to make the DVD. Lest this seem just a personal complaint, here's some of what has happened so far during the petition drive effort.

1. One of the three petitions written and printed, at considerable expense and effort, contains 81 words which is 6 words over the 75 word statutory limit. This was only discovered by media (see St. Petersburg Times archive for August 2005). It seems that the petition writer, leaders of the CFE effort, and its paid staff failed to count the words. This strange mistake has caused some consternation and dismay. To my knowledge the problem has not been resolved as of this date. The result may be that this petition, relevant to the implementation of the other two, may be nullified before the vote. A large amount of money was spent to print the petition forms, and there have been other problems with the forms (see paragraph 2).

2. The original petition forms were flawed which created difficulties, so new forms had to be made and printed. The corrected forms on NCR paper require a firm signature to insure that all three petitions are signed, but many signers do not use enough pen pressure so their forms are invalid. There are other problems too.

3. A single, loyal, committed and hard working volunteer has worked in the petition drive for months with little assistance. He reviews completed and returned forms for errors. At the CFE office, I have seen paid staff who should be working on the daily, tedious chore of screening signed petition forms for correctness. They seem to be doing little while the unpaid volunteer does their work for them.

Considerable money from various sources is funding the CFE's petition drive to pay staffers' salaries and petition signature collection costs which may be as much as $2 to $3 per signed petition. In short, it seems that even with a major expenditure of money, time and effort by many people it may take a miracle for them to meet their deadline. If CFE does meet its petition deadline, it may due more to volunteers all over the state than to the CFE leaders and paid staff. This is a vitally important effort that should be done efficiently and correctly. More later.

 
Saturday, September 03, 2005
  Trash bags and plain old common sense (edited)
 
These suggestions apply to many disaster prone areas, but especially in places like New Orleans which everyone knew was very vulnerable.
 
1. What is so difficult about handing out many large, strong plastic bags for people to put trash and human waste in. 
 
2. Prior to disasters, water, food, medical supplies and shallow draft aluminum boats (in flood threatened areas) should be pre-positioned in safe, secure, elevated places for emergencies.
 
3. Prior to disasters, pumps should be installed in well protected and elevated places with plenty of fuel.
 
4. Prior to disasters, people should be frequently informed as to the nearest and best places to go in emergencies and there should be food, water and medical supplies there.
 
5. Prior to disasters, vehicles with loud speakers should always be available for quick warnings.
 
6. Cheap radios should be distributed and a frequency designated for vital information broadcasts.
 
7. Prior to disasters, many trustworthy and screened individuals should be deputized and some even armed (with training) as a reserve force.
 
8. Prior to disasters, many folks should be trained in emergency first aid.
 
9. Prior to disasters, In threatened places like New Orleans, public service (PSA's) should be broadcast every month to inform, educate and motivate folks to be prepared with food, water, some clean dry clothes and basic first aid kits.
 
11. These are just a few of my own common sense ideas and I'm not even a "government official", who should have done these things. These simple, relatively inexpensive measures would be of immense value.
 
R M Chandler
 
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