Archive for the ‘Commentary’ Category

Another day

February 7, 2013

So I wake up to another day. I know it will be a day where there is little I can do to help our environment against our human practices that are not ecological.

It will be another day of lack of knowledge that is kept from us by corporations and our government. One which we know the government is making decisions concerning our environment that we, the common people, have no control over.

It will be a day in which I am still very dependent of society to survive instead of one where I would be able to depend on myself and the knowledge I possess to survive. It will not be a day where society is secondary to my survival.

Copyright © 2013 Jorge Luis Carbajosa

All Firearms Are Discharged By The Devil

December 17, 2012

There’s a Spanish proverb which says Las armas las carga el diablo which is also known as las armas son del diablo. It is a proverb that would be good for the American conscience to think about and be aware of at this time of tragedy, and it means that the devil is the one who discharges all firearms. So it doesn’t matter who carries or owns a firearm, ultimately it is the devil who will fire it.

The NRA and all gun supporters can make all the arguments in favor of weapons they want, but in the Spanish world we know this proverb to be true, and not necessarily in the sense that there is a devil out there who will indeed control any weapon you happen to be carrying, but in the sense that humans don’t quite realize what it means to take someone’s life, and how powerless we are over weapons that discharge themselves accidentally and have done so in too many tragic instances. It is for a reason, after all, that that the Fifth Commandment says “Thou shall not kill.”

Everyone knows that the kind of massacre that recently occurred in Connecticut, rarely, if ever, happens in Europe, where guns are basically banned almost everywhere. And ask yourself the following question: What business do you have owning an assault weapon, or a hand gun? If you really are so much into guns, I would not oppose that you own a hunting rifle, and that is all. Think about this: Do you want to carry a firearm? Sure, bring a rifle. I really have no problem with that and I don’t say it sarcastically because I will be able to see at a distance that you have one. And let’s see how well you can conceal a hunting rifle. I think police and security guards will agree.

I don’t want my children to grow up in a country where civilians have relatively easy access to firearms that are not hunting rifles or alike. I’m not a gun expert, but I think you understand what I am saying. I don’t like the idea that my 3 and 8 year old are not safe in this society. I don’t want my sons’ lives to be taken from them tragically by a fool. I don’t want my children to be raised in vain and to have their lives vanish because of someone’s lunacy.

The press now talks about a possible new ban on assault weapons. Well anyone can tell you  it will have to be much more than that. I’ve already expressed what I think of hand guns. Making elementary schools hire security guards could help (and possibly even decrease unemployment). But like a lawyer friend of mine pointed out there must also be firm liability laws to make gun ownership extremely expensive and to make manufacturing companies liable for their products.

Until then, or until something is changed in our society, what happened in Sandy Hook will not be of much surprise to any of us who live in this country. We will simply continue to hope that it doesn’t ever happen in our school district, or in the malls we go to.

Copyright © 2012 Jorge Luis Carbajosa

Owning the environment

October 4, 2012

If you can own a piece of land and if the government can own what is underneath it, like the oil, and the water in an aquifer, then why can’t I own the air above your land?

The answer to environmentalism is in the courts. Environmentalists must appropriate the environment and beat corporations and our government in their own game. Imagine oil companies had to pay for all the chemicals they dump into our environment. Just how cost effective would petrol be then?

Copyright © 2012 Jorge Luis Carbajosa

Black and White: Everything’s Relative

August 9, 2012

I learnt at an early age that everything is relative when it comes to physical features and appearance.

During my early childhood I lived in Spain and Brazil. Over there I was considered “rubio” and “louro” which both words mean blonde in Spanish and Portuguese respectively, but they also mean light skinned or fair.

When I was nine,  my family moved to Denmark and I remember being told that I was not blonde. The children who accused me of this, and whom I hopelessly argued against, were of course blonde and blue eyed, like most Danes. My light brown hair, which had so often identified me as blonde, was now all of a sudden very dark and my greenish-brown Mediterranean eyes did not help my cause either.

Later on as a grown man, when I married a woman from Haiti, I remember she would sometimes tell me that there are white people in her country. But when I visited Haiti, I noticed that the people my wife was referring to as white, were what in the U.S. and Europe people would always call black. They were basically light skinned black people. No one in Europe or in the U.S. would dare call these “white” people white.

In fact, the nick name of one of my brother-in-laws is “blanc,” which means white in French, and this is because he is considered light-skinned, but as you can probably guess, he is very dark skinned, and very African looking to the lay person.  It appears these people are referred to as white by my wife and others in Haiti because they can see they are lighter skinned, or that they have some European features which are uncommon to them. It seems that the word “white” in Haiti, has a similar meaning to the word “black” in the U.S. where everything that is not 100% white could be referred to as black.

What is also interesting is that some of those people my wife referred to as white, were so dark skinned that even in Latin America or in the Spanish world, they would not be called  mulatos, a word that is commonly used in Spanish but is considered a pejorative by some people in the English speaking world, which means someone who is half-white and half-black, like our president, Mr. Barack Obama, and kind of like my children.

So in conclusion, it is to one’s advantage that everything is relative and that we don’t have to live inside labels that are true in one place but false in the next.

Copyright © 2012  By Jorge L. Carbajosa

Essay on Property and Common Elements First Draft

October 20, 2011

Think of our planet as a Condominium Building. You are a unit owner and absolutely everything outside of your unit is considered a Common Element, which is property owned by all unit owners. Like in a condominium building changing the common elements requires following a set of rules and procedures.

One of the challenges faced by humankind today is property. Although the land and the sea and all elements of the earth are part of the universe and mankind in reality has very little claim to them, private property has been defined legally by mankind to favor the powerful and the few.

Elements of the earth that are of monetary value to mankind are usually well defined and owned. But there is an imbalance when it comes to the elements of the earth that are of no monetary value to humankind, for instance, and among the millions of common elements, sea water at large or the air we breathe.
So if there is to be a capitalist system and/or commerce in place then it should be one where all elements in our planet are owned by the people, not just those elements in the universe that are of subjective monetary value. We as a society must enact laws that give the people ownership of all the elements of the planet we live in.

Subjective monetary value is what our society has defined to be of monetary value. I call it subjective because the Common Elements are for the most part not governed or defined by property laws in our society today. So for instance a fish swimming in the middle of the ocean has been given no value and/or ownership by our society.

One of the reasons we have so many environmental problems in our planet is because many of the elements in our world are considered to be of no monetary value and they are not really owned by anyone; for example, a piece of paper or plastic that gets discarded into your garbage; the air you breathe or the fish in the middle of the ocean.

When the petrol under the ground belongs to the people of a land, not a government and/or corporation, the petrol company will have to pay to purchase the petrol or gas under the ground from the people. They will have to pay for any waste generated by that petrol if the air or elements are affected by the processing of the petrol for manufacturing. The consumer too will have to pay for altering common elements. For instance, the gas you put in your car creates CO2 and your car is expelling it into the air but the air belongs to the people, so it is a common element, so you the consumer will have to pay for that right, which is the right to contaminate the air and/or environment.

The same applies to say, Lake Michigan. When there is ownership of the lake and its resources by the people, companies will have to pay the people to exploit the lake and/or dump waste into the lake. The usage of the lake, appropriation of its resources and emissions of waste into the lake will have to be controlled by the people, not the government, not any corporation.

The same applies to the fish in say, the middle of the ocean. The fish company goes and fishes the fish and they sell it to you. The consumer must pay to buy the fish in order to eat it. The consumer arguably pays for the fish and the service of having the fish brought to his/her table or whereabouts. But the price of that fish is false because the fish was stolen from the sea without due payment. Well, the payment might be the work that the fisherman did to fish it, you might say; or the license to fish that the fisherman purchased. But how about the raw material, which in this case I consider it to be the fish? Who is paying for the fish, who owns that fish? No one, you might say, the fish is out there free for anyone to go and get it. This argument is false because if that fish were gold on a hill or someone’s backyard, then you would not have the right to fish it because somebody would already own it. But it is not the same, you might say, how can anyone compare gold to fish in the ocean? Well, why not? I propose that we make that fish in the ocean a common element belonging to the people, in the same way that the gold mine was taken by the powerful and appropriated by them and kept from the common person. There came a time in our history where certain men decided to appropriate land and resources they deemed valuable to them. In the same fashion and under the same principle the people of this planet have every right to appropriate absolutely every single element of this planet and make it a common element to all inhabitants of this planet. This is not to say that private property ought to be abolished but that private property must be held always in relation to common property. In other words, private property should not exist without common property first and should have never existed.

The common elements of our planet are everything in this planet and if our society wants to put the principles of private property into place then our society has to also allow and give ownership of the common elements to our society as well.
Copyright 2011 Jorge Luis Carbajosa

Proud to be an American

August 16, 2011

A letter to the Management of the Security Company at the Department of Homeland  Security Building

To: Security Manager at DHS

536 S Clark St, Chicago

08/15/11

Dear Security Manager,

This letter is to commend your security guard, Mr. Joe Naxci for doing such a great job.

I am a court interpreter and this morning I entered your immigration building to go to a few cases in the basement, where the two court rooms are.

I saw Mr. Joe Naxci performing his job outstandingly at the main entrance lobby as I waited to go through the metal detectors. You could clearly hear him above all the other six to seven guards there. He acted like a general in a battlefield shouting orders at all the immigrants that were going through security. “TAKE YOUR BELT OFF AND GO THROUGH THE METAL DETECTOR ONCE AGAIN!!! MA’AM! MA’AM!!! ONCE AGAIN I SAID!!!” this at a little old Central-American looking woman. I can understand, you should have seen the way she was dressed. She clearly was poor and probably never bothered to learn English.

He also shouted really loud at an oriental woman who had three little children and one had managed to sit on a window sill. MA’AM, MA’AM!!! REMOVE YOUR CHILD !!! That man should be promoted.

It makes me proud to see one of your officers go well beyond the call of duty for the security of our Fatherland. I mean, these darn immigrants must think they own this country.  You’re not as boring as Federal Criminal Court, they’re way too polite over there. They are probably doing something wrong because they don’t make you put your hat inside the metal detector. And I am happy to go through the metal detectors every time I’m scheduled at immigration court and listen to your guards’ rude but so necessary yells to take my belt off, put my wallet and lap-top on the conveyor belt and all my belongings. Yes, even though I have been an independent contractor for them since 1997 and I have gone through a security clearance several times to work there, I think it really adds to our nation’s security to have me go through the metal detectors every single time. And the radiation does not scare me in the least. I know you get more radiation from the microwave at home.

Oh, and before I forget, I also want to commend officer Jane Ratched for a job well done: While I was leaning at the counter she politely barked at me to “GET OFF THE COUNTER IT IS A SECURITY BREACH!” I did that while waiting to be escorted to the court-rooms in the basement. I am not offended, I don’t go to those immigration courts that often and she’s probably only seen me a dozen times before. I am really sorry, I have an injured back so I sometimes lean on things to hold my weight and since I am an independent contractor my insurance deductible is very high and I still haven’t gotten around getting that MRI.

So in conclusion, I know that our tax money is going to very good use when I see guards like the ones in your company and I know they make all Americans proud.

Sincerely,

Copyright © 2011 Jorge Luis Carbajosa