A clip filmed with my iPhone riding a short stretch of the Greenbrier River Trail in Hillsboro, West Virginia. The clip tells you a little about the trail and the experience of riding it.
Yesterday I biked about 15 miles of the Trail, as you can see mapped out on the site below. I biked out about 7 1/4 miles then most of the way back. Then I stopped MapMyRide and continued for the remainder narrated in the video.
The clip is a rough cut. I’ll do a proper edit eventually, probably collecting clips from different parts of the trail. But I have only recently started my job here at the Pearl S. Buck Birthplace and we have a lot to do, so for now, rough cuts it is.
Continue reading
Author Archives: Michael Anthony
Scholars at Risk Academic Freedom Media Review, October 28-November 4, 2011
The media review seeks to raise awareness about academic freedom issues in the news. Subscription information and archived media reviews are available here. The views and opinions expressed in these articles are not necessarily those of Scholars at Risk.
——————————————————-
TURKEY 11/3/11: Ragip Zarakolu releases public letter from prison
PEN, 11/3
Russian Terror Law Has Unlikely Targets
Sophia Kishkovksy, The New York Times, 11/3
Climate change scientist Michael Mann fends off sceptic group’s raid on emails
Suzanne Goldenberg, The Guardian, 11/2
Continue reading
Campaign Ads, Satirical Magazines and Religious Intolerance
I’m used to negative politics and personal attack ads. The strategy of attacking your opponents character is probably as old as politics itself, but it’s gotten particularly virulent in recent years. Unfortunately, it’s seldom elucidating in terms of someone’s ability to govern. Women and men who have made mistakes in their past or who have truly disastrous personal lives, may well be effective policy makers. At the very least, though, we ought to be able to expect these personal attacks to be factual, and far too often they aren’t. Just follow FactCheck.org or Politifact.com and you will see far to many examples of ads called to task for being untrue.
Sadly, I’ve grown used to these. They disgust me, but they don’t infuriate me. What does enrage me is negative campaigning the resounds beyond the campaign and affects our society more broadly. This is advertising that plays on fear, intolerance and ignorance, impugning the character not only of an individual candidate but of an entire race, religion, ethnicity, or other group. In a particularly egregious example, popular Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison, a Democrat and a Muslim, is now being challenged in the race by Gary Boisclair, an anti-abortion activist, and member of Randall Terry’s Society for Truth and Justice (STJ), one of 25 candidates they are running in carefully selected advertising markets, less in hopes of getting the candidate elected than as a cover for running explicit anti-abortion tv advertising. It’s a sleazy but clever strategy, one that the organization itself cops to. I kind of admire it. But Bosclair is also using campaign ads promote a Islamophobic agenda, running ads that explicitly attack Ellison’s religion, and that is unacceptable.
Continue reading
An Exciting Three Weeks So Far!
I could leave here tomorrow and this will already have been an extraordinary experience. I’m not planning on it, mind you. I’ve only been here three weeks and have barely gotten started on the project that is my main reason for being here, and I’m really just getting settled in.
Nonetheless, it’s been an exciting three weeks. I’ve heard some amazing bluegrass music played live, nearly run over a black bear, spent some time riding along one the best bike trails on the East Coast, seen a stunning display of fall foliage, been visited on my front lawn by a family of deer in the wee hours of the morning, learned that Pearl Buck was a much more fascinating person than I ever gave her credit for, met some really interesting people, and hopefully made a friend or two. That’s just some of the highlights of these three weeks.
I’m no stranger to the countryside. Between the Boy Scouts and family trips, we did a lot of camping when I was growing up. Yet I’ve been astonished by the wildlife I’ve seen in just a few weeks, ranging from the wide variety of birds, to small mammals and arachnids.
Continue reading
Academic Freedom Media Review-October 8 – 14, 2011
Here, with my apologies, is a delayed reposting of the Scholars at Risk Academic Freedom Media Review. It is published every Friday, this one on Friday, October 14.
The Scholars at Risk media review seeks to raise awareness about academic freedom issues in the news. Subscription information and archived media reviews are available online. The views and opinions expressed in these articles are not necessarily those of Scholars at Risk.
——————————————————-
IRAQ: Sweeping higher education reforms planned
Wagdy Sawahel, University World News
EGYPT: Elections reinstate some university leaders
Ashraf Khaled, University World News
Myanmar prisoner amnesty prompts call for all political detainees to be freed, not just 10 pct
Associated Press, Washington Post, 10/13
Pressure Builds Over Chen
Grace Kei Lai-see, Radio Free Asia, 10/13
SAR Academic Freedom Media Review – October 1-7, 2011
The following is the Scholars at Risk Academic Freedom Media Review, re-published here regularly, as received. For more information on SAR, visit their site.
The Scholars at Risk media review seeks to raise awareness about academic freedom issues in the news. Subscription information and archived media reviews are available here. The views and opinions expressed in these articles are not necessarily those of Scholars at Risk.
Assuring Civility or Curbing Criticism?
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, 10/7
One year on: Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo still in jail
Michael Bristow, BBC News, 10/6
Chen Campaigners Detained
Luisetta Mudie, Radio Free Asia, 10/6
Scholars at Risk calls for letters on behalf of Mr. Yassin Ziadeh of Syria
Scholars at Risk, 10/6
Continue reading
Hillsboro, West Virginia. Who knew?
But it is a little exotic! I’ve only been here a couple days so far, but it’s already clear to me that life in rural West Virginia is very different from life in suburban Richmond, Virginia. Too many of us fail to appreciate the internal diversity in this vast land of ours, and when we do, we tend to indulge in negative stereotypes. My experience in life has shown us how wrong those can be.
Continue reading
I'm Sorry Facebook, I Just Don't Love You Anymore…
In an article previewing the changes Facebook recently made public, Mashable’s Ben Parr indicated that Facebook was making the changes because it wanted to rekindle an emotional connection with users.
After years of dating, the magic between Facebook and its users has dissipated. It’s a natural evolution in any relationship, but now there is another suitor vying for Facebook’s users. And a lot of people think this suitor is easy on the eyes.
That’s why Facebook launched three recent changes: revamped Friend Lists, a real-time news ticker, and the subscribe button… But these changes are just the beginning. The changes Facebook will roll out on Thursday are designed to enhance the emotional connection its users have to each other through Facebook.
I can’t speak for anyone else, but this strategy isn’t working for me! My relationship with Facebook has never gotten old because like an insecure lover, it’s never stopped demanding my attention, to the point of provoking annoyance. I’ve given it a lot of attention, integrating it into my professional and personal lives, but it’s proven unpredictable, unsure of the terms under which it wants to participate. It’s time to cool things off. Since Facebook has so few concerns about private affairs going public, how would you like to read my Dear John Letter to Facebook?
Continue reading
Day One: The Life is Good Festival
Today was the first day of the Life is good Festival, and it was a lot of fun. Life is Good founders Bert and John Jacobs announced from the stage that the festival had exceeded last year’s totals and is close to reaching the goal of $1 million to help children in crisis. But close isn’t good enough. Perhaps you can help with a donation? You can learn more about the cause and make a donation on this page. You can also just come out to the festival!
Continue reading
Car-Free Week! By Choice?
Car-Free Week is an expansion of World Car-Free Day, celebrated on September 22, which began in in Europe in the 1990s. Now communities all around the world are offering incentives to encourage people to walk, bike, use public transportation or carpool this week. You may just discover it’s easier and more pleasant than you thought. Personally, I like getting my exercise during my commute when I bike. If I take mass transit, I can actually do a bit of reading or even some work. Driving is, at best, an opportunity to think and maybe make a couple calls. It’s also generally cheaper.
Here’s some links about Car-Free Week in general and here in Massachusetts. There may be specific activities in your city, so do a local search in your area, as well.
World Carefree Network
To avoid the adverse http://www.devensec.com/ levitra sale drug effects you should be sexually stimulated. He provides best treatment purchase levitra online devensec.com for Low Libido and low sperm count. In fact, participants’ mean http://www.devensec.com/news/MRPC_Final%20_Report_7-12-16.pdf generic viagra score on the life satisfaction scale-a metric widely accepted to be one of the wide hitting sexual conditions in man suffering all across the world. In an improbable case that you do not take more than three cup prix viagra cialis of coffee in a day. Massachusetts Car-Free Week – Commute car-free in MA and earn prizes at this site.
Car-Free Days blog
European Mobility Week
Strive Not to Drive