Monday, May 25, 2015

The primary cause of police alienation

The primary cause of police alienation from the populace is the patrol car. Patrol cars like all automobiles insulate us from human person to person contact. A car is like a suit of armor: This is one of the major causes of road rage: people feel protected inside their "rolling armor."

If the police want to improve relations with the public they need to get out of their cars and "walk the beat" for at least half an hour everyday and get to know the people they are supposed to serve. This is especially true in urban and low income neighborhoods where many residents do not own cars. The exercise will do the officers some good as well.

This is how it was before the advent of the automobile and how it is in  many Japanese communities where police are generally well liked by the public and highly regarded.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

BELIEVE? [That's the easy way and the fool's way].
BELIEVE

DON'T BELIEVE!

QUESTION EVERYTHING!
QUESTION EVERYTHING!
-With regards to DeCartes and the Reverend Naomi King.

The Greatest hits of Enigma 1990-2010 In A Join Mix

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

As Florida's Geology Melts Away...

Many of the symptoms of climate change can be addressed with seawalls, irrigation, reinforced construction and raising buildings above flood plains. One of these symptoms which is most difficult to respond to on site is the increasingly frequent phenomena of sink holes caused by the largely invisible erosion of soil and "bedrock" by increasingly heavy torrential rain storms.

One of the states most vulnerable to this underground disintegration  Florida. I am not a geologist but it is widely known that much, if not most of the state of Florida sits above a great shelf of porous honeycombed limestone which is readily dissolved by the thousands of unknown subterranean streams and rivers running above, through and underneath it at an increasing rate as rainfall volumes increase dramatically.

Two notable tragedies caused by this undermining Floridian phenomenon were widely publicized last year. The first incident concerned a man who was sleeping in his suburban home when it was suddenly swallowed along with him by a sink hole. He was never seen again. The second was a relatively new luxury hotel several stories tall which collapsed when a sinkhole manifested beneath it.

Are you considering relocating to Florida in the new climate change paradigm? You might want to reconsider. This state is prone to roast in the southern latitudes, be eroded by rising sea levels, damaged by increasingly destructive hurricanes, tornadoes and other storms and, worst of all, unpredictable collapse from underneath as its limestone geology washes away. Increasingly, living in a home in Florida is like moving onto a shifting sandbar in the middle of a steaming tropical high volume river delta.

If your horizon is ten to fifteen years you'll probably survive Florida. If it's more than fifteen years from now you might be prudent to seriously look into moving to a home built above solid bedrock [granite, igneous rock] at an elevation well above the 100 year flood plain in Burlington, Vermont near Lake Champlain where there's plentiful fresh water, a low crime rate, cooler temperatures and nearby farmland. Better yet, if you don't mind immigrating, take a serious look at the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario for the long haul: twenty years or more.

CONTACT: You can always contact Peter Ogden at: peterogden7x7@yahoo.com or
through the end of autumn 2014 via snail mail at:
Peter Ogden, 110 Genesee St., Ste. 707, Nano Utica, New York, 13502.