Tagging Order

I’ve been tagged once again, this time by Jason. This meme’s got more categories than you can shake a stick at, and it’s little all over the place. So hang on, we’ve got a lot of ground to cover....

10 Years Ago:

Hmmm… A decade ago I was in Charlottesville beginning my final year of college. I was singing a lot and just getting rolling on my undergraduate thesis. That is to say, I was at least considering how to begin the process of starting the thinking about getting rolling on my thesis. And my 21st birthday was tantalizingly close.

5 Years Ago:

We’d been married for almost two months, we’d moved across the country, and I’d mostly unpacked all of our stuff. I’d taught myself Flash, put together a now woefully out-of-date portfolio, and was refreshing Craigslist every few hours in the hopes of finding a job.

1 Year Ago:

I was actually vaguely optimistic that we were going to end up with a different president. Oops. I was reading a lot of blogs, but I hadn’t figured out how to use an RSS reader. I hadn’t gotten around to starting my own site yet, so I was writing extraordinarily long emails to friends instead. And I was staring 30 right in the face.

Yesterday:

Lets see… had a few meetings, listened to Takk... a few times in anticipation of Saturday’s concert, started sketches for a new website project, did a relatively restrained happydance, enjoyed feijoada with a Gonzo Imperial Porter for dinner, took a beating from my wife at cards, returned the favor at Yahtzee, and watched The Daily Show.

5 Snacks I Enjoy:

Skittles, kettle corn from that guy at the farmers’ market, Trader Joe’s pita chips, Humboldt Fog goat cheese, Ayinger Celebrator (beer is too a snack).

5 Songs I Know All the Words To:

“The Boy in the Bubble” by Paul Simon, “My Baby Loves a Bunch of Authors” by Moxy Früvous, “Fuel” by Ani DiFranco, The Animaniacs theme song, and absolutely nothing by Sigur Rós.

5 Things I’d Do with 100 Million Dollars:

Jason’s answer started with tithing, and that sounds about right to me, too. So, church and charities first. After that, who knows? Maybe we could buy our own island in The World off the coast of Dubai.

Okay, so that’s a little ostentatious. Instead of a man-made luxury island, perhaps we’d have enough to get us a nice little fixer-upper somewhere in the Bay Area.

Wait, you mean we’d have enough left over to do other things? Fine, maybe we’d buy furniture for the house, like a nice chesterfield or an ottoman. And a monkey. Haven’t you always wanted a monkey?

5 Places I’d Run Away To:

North Sonoma Coast, New Zealand, Chicago, Seattle, Boston.

Or that luxury island in Dubai. That would be fine, too.

5 Things I’d Never Wear:

Cowboy boots, leather pants, a speedo, a @$#%! Yankees hat, or, um, my wife says I’d never wear “trendy man shirts,” although I’m neither sure what that means nor how I should feel about it.

5 Favorite TV Shows:

The Simpsons, NewsRadio, The Muppet Show, The West Wing, The Daily Show.

5 Biggest Joys:

These are the first few that came to mind, and they seem superlative enough to me: Laughing with my wife, getting hugged by our shy older cat, listening to a great album for the first time, driving the really curvy parts of Route 1, and watching the Red Sox win.

5 Favorite Toys:

zalmPod2, Squeezebox, Settlers of Catan, PowerMac G5, Apple Cinema Display.

5 Fine Folks Who Can Now Consider Themselves Tagged:

Scott, Jim, los McCartys, Nicole and ninjanun.

Coalition for Darfur: Anarchy and the UN

Reposted from the Coalition for Darfur:

As Darfur descends into anarchy, the United Nations appears unable to do any more than express concerns and continue to ask the parties involved to cease their violent attacks.

After rebels attacked and took control of the town of Sheiria last week, the Sudanese army said it was prepared to retake the town, to which the rebels replied that they would “repulse anything from the Sudanese government’s army.”

The upsurge in violence forced thousands more out of the villages, swelling the ranks of the internally displaced that already numbers nearly 2 million.

As the violence was raging, even the UN’s own Special Representative Jan Pronk, a man who tends to see everything in Sudan through rose-colored glasses, was forced to admit that the violence was spiraling out of control. He was joined by the US government, which stated that the “uptick in violence ... is of concern to us” and the UN’s genocide advisor, Juan Mendez, who acknowledged that Khartoum had done little to disarm militias or end the “culture of impunity” that exists in Darfur.

Pronk went on to state that the UN must give the Sudanese government and rebels an ultimatum to compel them to reach some sort of peace agreement and even made the startling admission that, thus far, the UN has utterly failed to deal with Darfur

Pronk said that when the Darfur conflict began U.N. humanitarian officials agitated for the Security Council to take up the conflict, which it refused to do.

A “massive force” was needed [in 2003] then to guarantee security but instead several thousand African Union troops and monitors had to carry the burden. And now the council needed to plan for how to keep the peace in case a peace deal was signed.

Pronk was quoted elsewhere as saying

He said the war situation in Sudan was “everybody’s failure” and could have been avoided if the international community had acted quickly.

How could the present day situation have been avoided?

“I think there should have been intervention in 2003,” Pronk said, adding that while the occurrence of genocide in the country was debatable, “There was mass slaughter of people. It needed humanitarian intervention.”

Of course, the international community did not act quickly, nor are they acting quickly now.

In fact, while Darfur burned, the BBC reported that American and British intelligence officials, along with representatives of the UN, China and 12 African nations were in Khartoum discussing cooperation on counter-terrorism operations in the region.

Hosting the conference is part of a sustained diplomatic push by Sudan to shake off its pariah status ... When the opportunity for this second regional conference on counter-terrorism came up, Sudan competed for the right to host it ... The decision of the CIA to agree to come to Sudan shows the pragmatism of the intelligence community against the continuing political desire of America to punish Sudan for what has happened in Darfur.

Khartoum continues to work to “shake off its pariah status,” with Sudanese Ambassador Khidir Haroun Ahmed publishing an op-ed in the Washington Times today claiming that “After two decades of brutal civil war, Sudan is emerging as a reminder that engagement, dialogue and intensive diplomacy can resolve seemingly intractable problems and permit a country to look to the future with optimism.”

Meanwhile, the violence and anarchy Khartoum unleashed is now spilling over into neighboring Chad, a country that is already host to an estimated 200,000 refugees from Darfur

A group of unidentified armed men in military uniform crossed into Chad from Sudan early on Monday, killing 36 herders and stealing livestock, the Chadian government said.

The violence, in addition to threatening the people of Darfur, is also threatening the relief work that sustains them, as U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland noted yesterday

“If it (the violence) continues to escalate, we may not be able to sustain our operations for 2.5 million people requiring life-saving assistance,” he said, adding: “In Darfur, it (aid distribution) could all end tomorrow. It is as serious as that.”

As Eric Reeves never fails to remind us, in December 2004, Egeland warned that 100,000 people could die a month if humanitarian organizations are forced to suspend operations in Darfur.

Despite all of this, Pronk still managed to recently declare that progress was being made on implementing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the North and South and on efforts to reach peace in Darfur.

Such a statement is utterly feckless and shameful.

As Gerald Caplan, author of “Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide,” wrote last week

But what we are learning from Darfur, which we never remotely imagined, is that even naming a genocide is an utterly inconsequential exercise in hot air ... despite the apparent concern of many western leaders, despite the pressure from elements of civil society, the catastrophe in Darfur is explicitly allowed to continue ... As always, everything takes precedence over the suffering and death of hundreds of thousands of distant, exotic others. It won’t be the last time.”

After two years, 400,000 deaths, and an estimated 3.5 million now entirely dependent on humanitarian aid, it must be stated that the UN and every one of its member nations have failed the people of Darfur and, in all likelihood, will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

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