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Saturday, September 14, 2013

11 Most Redneck Cities In the U.S.

These are the 11 most redneck cities in America, based on criteria including high school dropouts, gun and ammo stores, taxidermists, cowboy boot stores, country radio stations, NASCAR race tracks nearby, Walmarts, and riding lawn mower and tractor repair shops (all per capita). With apologies to Jeff Foxworthy...

Redneck stock photo 1.
Louisville, Kentucky - The original list on Movoto only went up to 10, so I badgered them for the 11th and they gave it up to me. Therefore, we can call this an 11 Points Exclusive -- the 11th most redneck-y city in the U.S. is Louisville, Kentucky. Yep, my exclusive scoop is that Kentucky belongs in the conversation when you're discussing the subject of rednecks. I'm a regular Bob Woodward over here.

Mesa, Arizona - Having driven through Mesa and seen two guys at a gas station walking around guns hanging from their belts (no law in Arizona prevents that), I'll confirm this one. In fact, Mesa has the highest ratio of gun and ammo stores to people of any city in the U.S. It's 132 stores-to-446,000 people; that's one guns and/or ammo store per 3,379 people. They might not even match that ratio with grocery stores. 

Cleveland, Ohio - I guess Cleveland's gone a lot more country in the decade-and-a-half since I left. Turns out we have the lowest high school graduation rates in the U.S. So, let it be known. If you're a redneck who likes wildly unpredictable weather, lake effect snow, a football organization that specializes in psychologically torturing its fans, and a few places that serve really good corned beef -- consider packin' it up and moving to Cleveland. Houses available.

Sacramento, California - This is the other "northern" city on the list. So prepare accordingly if your kid's debate club has a meet in Sacramende.

Arlington, Texas - Arlington has the most cowboy boot stores per capita and the most riding mower and tractor repair shops per capita. On the strength of that big two it seems like it would've been the favorite to come out on top. But just like its baseball team in the World Series, a few big bats can't make up for everything. 

(That's a very arbitrary shot at the Texas Rangers. I really have no specific beef with them. I'm just feeling ornery having found out I grew up a redneck without realizing it.) 


Redneck stock photo 2.
Fort Worth, Texas - So Arlington makes it, Fort Worth makes it and Dallas rudely gets shut out entirely? It's the Cooper Manning thing all over again.

Tulsa, Oklahoma - Tulsa's first motto was "America's Most Beautiful City." In the 1960s they changed to a slightly less vain but equally grandiose motto, "Oil Capital of the World." Now, they're using a totally generic (but less hubris-y) motto, "A New Kind of Energy." What does all this mean? I think landing fifth on the most redneck cities list just might provide a much needed rebranding opportunity.

Nashville, Tennessee - Not a bad showing at all for the most reluctant member of the Confederacy. "Look at us now, South Carolina," you might -- but probably won't -- hear them say. I'm certain there are about 15 or so Vanderbilt professors who are appalled that Nashville finished up here; meanwhile, the entire city of Memphis is nodding in agreement.


Redneck stock photo 3.
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - Oklahoma City is the home of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, the only state capitol building with an oil well underneath it and the site of the world's largest livestock markets. Even more impressive: None of that stuff counted toward this list and OKC still had enough juice to land in third place.

Kansas City, Missouri - I ran this by three people from Kansas City and had virtually identical exchanges with all three:
Me: KC was named the second-most redneck city in the country.

Them: You sure they didn't mean Kansas City, Kansas? Those people are hillbillies.

Me: Nope, Kansas City, Missouri.

Them: (brief pause) Yeah, I can believe it.
I guess there's chewing tobacco floating in all those fountains after all.

Atlanta, Georgia - Good for Atlanta, I'm sure it's quite a redneck paradise, blah blah blah -- how did northern Florida get shut out of this list? If the people behind the list posted a correction tomorrow and said they messed up, the 11 most redneck U.S. cities are actually Pensacola, Tallahassee, Panama City, Jacksonville, Gainesville, Daytona Beach, DeLand, Fort Walton Beach, Leesburg, Palm Coast and Deltona, would anyone blink?

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Di Jerman, pengangguran dibayar Rp 6 juta atau 382 euro per bulan

 The end of angst? Prosperous Germans in no mood for change
Among European Union members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), only Hungary and Britain have a bigger percentage of low-wage workers than Germany, thanks to a decade of stagnating pay, a surge in temporary contracts and 400 euro-per-month "mini-jobs".
The economic divide no longer runs East-West, as it did after Germany united in 1990. The survey of German fears showed for the first time in over 20 years that people living in the former communist East, where Merkel herself grew up, are no more fearful about their future than those in the West.
Crucially, there is a safety net for people like Rudi Detje, a 48-year-old native of Bremerhaven who trained as a shipbuilder in the 1980s just as the industry was collapsing. After decades in and out of jobs, he started a moving business in 2010.
He gets 382 euros per month in unemployment benefits and is allowed to keep just 100 euros of his earnings on top of that. But the state pays his rent and he can invest income that exceeds his take-home ceiling in tools and equipment.
Hans-Ulrich Wehler, the dean of German social historians, highlighted in a recent book the growing gap between rich and poor. But even he concedes that Germans are much better off than many of their western counterparts.
"The figures show rising income inequality, but this debate simply doesn't get much traction," Wehler told Reuters.
"There are very few long-term unemployed, we've had a social security net since Bismarck, pension coffers are full and a huge amount of wealth has accumulated. Everyone knows they will be taken care of. For the most part, Germans are content."
An Allensbach survey last month on the life, hopes and worries of the "Generation Mitte" -- the 35 million-strong age group between 30 and 59 -- found they were "eminently satisfied" with their situation and looked to the future with optimism.
WAVING THE FLAG
Germany is no longer the "Sick Man of Europe" as it was dubbed a decade ago. Nor is it the guilt-ridden country that once felt obliged to open its wallet to its EU partners regardless of the cost.
There is little public appetite for funding more euro zone bailouts, a YouGov survey showed last week, nor much desire for closer integration unless this would make it easier for Germany to impose budget discipline on its partners.
Yet at the same time, six in 10 Germans view the EU favorably, according to a Pew Research survey published in May. More than half say European integration has helped the country.
This may be because the crisis has barely touched them -- even in Bremerhaven, which as the fourth largest container port in Europe is sensitive to the ebb and flow of global trade.
"The euro crisis has had a marginal impact," Mayor Grantz says. "Exports to other EU countries have stagnated a bit. But we can't say the crisis has really hit us. It's a little dent which is not expected to last long."
Germany's strength during the crisis has thrust it into the role of Europe's economic leader, giving it a dash of self-confidence that sits comfortably with a quiet revival in German patriotism, visible since it hosted the World Cup in 2006.
Germans are no longer shy about waving the flag and Merkel was applauded for wearing a necklace in black, red and gold during a debate on national TV.
In Berlin, a modern replica of the Prussian Stadtschloss palace is rising from the ground, recalling the proud era before two horrific world wars.
Germany is even urged, by its wartime enemy Britain and long-suffering neighbor Poland among others, to take on a bolder geopolitical leadership role.
Merkel's hesitant reaction to the Syria conflict, echoing her abstention from a U.N. vote authorizing force in Libya two years ago, shows Germany remains reluctant to punch its weight in foreign affairs.
"The German elite obsesses about business rather than diplomatic or military strategy," notes Ulrike Guerot at the European Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin. "German citizens agree and see nothing wrong with living comfortably in a larger version of Switzerland."
The post-war taboo on German hegemony can seem like a convenient excuse "to refuse involvement in the travails of the world", says Joffe of Die Zeit.
Preferring to look inward, Germany finds reason for self-congratulation and nowhere more than in flourishing Bavarian towns like Eichstaett.
The contrast with the rest of Europe -- especially southern countries like Greece and Spain, where unemployment is 20 times higher than parts of Bavaria -- could not be more stark.
At the town hall, Bittl's biggest worry is that a company might arrive with blueprints for a new factory requiring 500 workers. "That would be a problem, as we don't have the spare workforce," he says.
It is success like this that has turned Germany into the most arrogant and least compassionate country in Europe in the eyes of many of its partners, according to the Pew survey.
But as long as the Merkel approach -- slow and steady as the Altmuehl river -- continues to furnish Germans with better jobs than their neighbors, and a safety net for people like Rudi Detje in Bremerhaven, Germans will have little incentive to change.
By Stephen Brown and Noah Barkin
EICHSTAETT/BREMERHAVEN, Germany (Reuters) - The Altmuehl is Germany's slowest-flowing river and Hans Bittl, who lives along its banks in Eichstaett, sees this as a metaphor for the low-key success of his Bavarian town.
"People in Eichstaett are very cautious and don't go along with every new fashion or idea. They bide their time and see if it works," says Bittl, chief clerk at the town hall.
It is a trait the university town, whose unemployment rate of 1.3 percent is the lowest in Germany, shares with Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is counting on support from such pockets of prosperity to win a third term on September 22.
The outcome of the vote and the course Europe's strongest economy steers afterwards is as important to Germany's partners as it is to those casting ballots.
With well-paid jobs making cars for Audi in nearby Ingolstadt and light-bulbs for Osram, Eichstaett is the envy of less fortunate regions.
Yet even in places like Bremerhaven, 500 km (340 miles) to the northwest, where the demise of the shipbuilding and fishing industries has spawned unemployment of 15 percent, the highest rate in the country, the mood isn't entirely bleak.
Bremerhaven is reinventing itself as a hub for offshore wind energy and luring tourists from surrounding regions to its refurbished port promenade, now dotted with hotels and museums celebrating its maritime heyday.
"We've emerged from the vale of tears," says Bremerhaven Mayor Melf Grantz. "The difficult times are behind us. People are proud of their city again."
Reality for the average German lies somewhere between the Baroque spires of Eichstaett and the container cranes that tower above the dock in Bremerhaven.
But these two centers, at opposite ends of the economic spectrum, offer clues to the national mood ahead of a federal vote that is being closely watched across Europe. Germany has been central to Europe's response to a debt crisis that began in Greece in 2009.
Germans are less worried about their jobs than they have been in years. Over the past half decade, as the economy rebounded strongly from the global financial crisis, the number of long-term unemployed in the country has tumbled 40 percent.
In Eichstaett and Bremerhaven, people say the euro zone crisis that plunged southern Europe into deep recession, has been barely noticed.
Nearly a quarter of a century since reunification and a decade after a shake-up of the welfare state, German "angst" is fading, replaced by a more confident and contented country that is less shy about trumpeting its successes.
"Germany is no longer a country of fainthearts but of people who are realistic about their problems," says Manfred Schmidt, a political scientist at Heidelberg University who presented an annual survey on the "Fears of the Germans" last week in Berlin.
It is because of this general mood, perhaps, that the election campaign has seemed so uneventful. In a prosperous country where consensus often trumps confrontation, there doesn't seem to be any room for divisive, partisan policy debates. Nor is there a strong desire for change.
"German politics may be boring, but what would we rather have? The same situation as Greece? Or America with its polarized, deadlocked parties? Or perhaps Weimar?" says Josef Joffe, publisher-editor of German weekly Die Zeit. "Rarely in their democratic history have the Germans enjoyed such good fortune."
THE BOTTOM RUNG
As Merkel's political rivals have been at pains to stress throughout the campaign, Germany has its share of problems.
There is the chancellor's shift from nuclear to renewable energy, which officials in Bremerhaven say has been grossly mismanaged.
Nils Schnorrenberger, managing director of the Bremerhaven Economic Development Agency, says investors are being scared off and the city's transformation jeopardized by uncertainty over what will happen to feed-in tariffs, or financial incentives, for offshore wind beyond 2017.
"Offshore wind is the big hope right now, but it can go in the opposite direction very quickly," he says, denouncing what he calls "Banana Republic" investment conditions.
On top of the energy worries, the German economy has a range of other problems, from low incomes and a decaying infrastructure to strained municipal budgets and an aging population.
(editing by Janet McBride)

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

How philosophy can transform you

Everyone has their favourite teacher.
In fact, the theme is so strong that Hollywood has built a whole genre around it –from Dead Poets SocietyDangerous Minds, the terrific Ryan Gosling vehicle Half Nelson, to October Sky where an outcast Jake Gyllenhaal takes his fascination with amateur rockets all the way from the state science fair to a job at NASA.
And last week one of my favourite teachers was attacked. Professor Paul Redding was my honours thesis supervisor at the University of Sydney, and I also took a class of his on Hegel that I would happily describe as transformative. 
But this humble, hardworking and globally recognised scholar had his work put on a shortlist of four Australian Research Council (ARC) grants that were described by Jamie Briggs, the head of the Coalition's Scrutiny of Government Waste Committee, as 'those ridiculous research grants that leave taxpayers scratching their heads wondering just what the government was thinking'.

Redding was not personally singled out for some error in his project or the way he researches or teaches. Instead, it's likely a junior Liberal staffer ran over the ARC list and, searching for anything that sounded foreign or didn't relate to science, maths, or medicine, picked Paul's The God of Hegel's Post-Kantian idealism. It was easy to set his research up as somehow too abstract and a waste of money. 
So what does Paul Redding do? Why should we pay for it?
They say that the man on the street can do philosophy. It's true. The man on the street can also catch a ball and drive a car – that doesn't make him Derek Jeter or Juan Manuel Fangio.
Behind every political slogan is an argument. Stop the boats, for instance, fairly bluntly argues that there are limits to compassion.
And behind the argument behind the slogan is a philosophy.
Tony Abbott's philosophy, touched on in his autobiography Battlelines and in exhaustively researched profiles like David Marr's essay Political Animal, is fairly explicitly informed by a bit of B.A. Santamaria's modern compassionate Catholicism mixed with some arch Thatcherism that rubbed off at Oxford.
Margaret Thatcher herself drew heavily on economist philosophers like Friedrich Hayek, who was Ludwig Wittgenstein's second cousin and one of the first people to read the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (Wittgenstein's ground breaking first book). Hayek took lectures in Aristotelian ethics, and read extensively of Ludwig Feuerbach, often described as the philosophical bridge between Hegel and Marx.
B.A. Santamaria was himself an arts student, and wrote a thesis that could easily have ended up on Jamie Briggs' hit list, titled Italy Changes Shirts: The Origins of Italian Fascism. Santamaria's influence on Abbott has meant that, as Chris Uhlmann wrote last year, 'Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas echo [through Abbott's politics]… it's arguable that some of his best political impulses are those shaped by a rich tradition of theology and philosophy.'
The truth is, scratch almost any major political leader and you start to find philosophers.
That is because philosophy is training for leadership.
Al Gore studied philosophy and phenomenology with an interest in Merleau-Ponty at Vanderbilt Divinity School. Pierre Trudeau, Prime minister of Canada for 15 years through two terms, was an intellectual influenced by philosophers such as Emmanuel Mounier, John Locke and David Hume. 17 Nobel Prize winners have studied philosophy, despite there being no specific prize for that discipline.
Anyone who can survive the complexities of modern political office is more often than not resourced with philosophy – and not the stuff you get in a two dollar book store, the serious stuff.
An IT consultant who has lost his Zetland investment apartment in a divorce reads Tony Robbins, a prime minister struggling to solve the intractable problems of the modern state reads Hegel.
Philosophy is not an easy subject nor some latte set cop out, it is the foundation and the dissection of all knowledge and is utterly painful to study.
I remember university law subjects as exercises in rote learning combined with a bit of horse-trading to get the best crib notes from older students. Legal reasoning involves dexterity and precision but it is at the end of the day a casual bun fight over how to define a few words and phrases in scraps of legislation and case law.
When a philosopher, like Martin Heiddeger for instance, rolls up his sleeves to argue the toss over the definition of words, what occurs is utterly different. Heidegger, the subject of another ridiculed ARC grant run by Dr Diego Bubbio at the University of Western Sydney, was a brilliant classicist able to describe the mutation of language from Ancient Greek philosophy to the present day.
He showed how words are very old tools that have been broken up and reassembled and reused, and how our confused and messy language is often not robust enough to talk through deep issues. Heidegger is insurance against the trickery of even the greatest rhetorician, against dogma in economics and science, against traps in language and traps in life.
Heiddeger's invented concept of zuhanden has influenced artificial intelligence, neuro-linguistic programming, hermeutics, cognitive science, every area of history and art, and continues to help people understand our interaction with technology.
Thinkers like Heidegger are capable of radically altering how you engage with the world – not just for a few weeks, but for the rest of your life. You don't have to subscribe to a deity or follow a plan or give someone money – you just have to read a difficult book. 
These difficult books are not going to make immediate sense to the man on the street, or even to academics outside the field.
But the same applies to high level research papers in economics or physics
Philosophy gets attacked because people think it's impractical and doesn't have a link to medicine or science or economics or our lives.
The truth is the opposite. 
I remember studying Paul Redding's course on Hegel's Elements of the Philosophy of Right. It was the clearest explanation of social institutions I had ever heard – how they are made and what they mean. Rather than rehearse the typical foundational myths, Redding's patient teaching deciphered the project of democracy and society, and taught me more about the true obligations and responsibilities of citizenship than scouts and organised sport and years of private education in Catholic schools.
In my paper for that class I remember quoting James Joyce's Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, and bonding with Redding over what a painful reminder Joyce's book was for anyone who had grown up in stultifying Catholic institutions full of guilt and doubt and misinformation.
I've carried that course with me ever since. 
Philosophy is about including you, not excluding you. It attempts to overcome difference. It untangles knots and delivers us closer to each other.
It trains politicians to happily navigate the mythologies of public life.
So strange then to see politics turn on its humble and wise parent. 
Let's hope it was a moment of irrational exuberance in a hard fought election campaign.
After all, as John Howard said, a social conservative is supposed to be 'someone who does not think he is morally superior to his grandfather'.

Monday, September 09, 2013