March 11, 2012
How Angela Merkel became Germany's unlikely green energy champion

One of the best articles I have read in a long time about how, even from a conservative’s point of view, the ONLY rational way forward for our society. is sustainability.

March 2, 2012
I particularly like the bank of berlin touch…
occupyallstreets:

Athens, Greece: A woman suffering from the effects of teargas passes a defaced Bank of Greece sign during protests against planned reforms by Greece’s coalition government.
Photo Credit

I particularly like the bank of berlin touch…

occupyallstreets:

Athens, Greece: A woman suffering from the effects of teargas passes a defaced Bank of Greece sign during protests against planned reforms by Greece’s coalition government.

Photo Credit

(via occupyallstreets)

January 3, 2012
Germany, Europe's green leader

An interesting/thoughtful look at policies pursued by Germany to move towards a sustainable, energy independent model (and a look at how much of this differs to decisions made by the US)

November 20, 2011
big picture (via boston globe)

occupyallthethings:

madrid

madrid

rome

rome

rome

berlin

berlin

toronto

new york

san jose

santiago

athens

oxnard, ca

zurich

little rock

seoul

brussels

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2011/10/occupy_wall_street_global_prot.html

October 18, 2011
Germany returns Namibian skulls taken in colonial era

fyeahafrica:

Namibian tribal leaders have visited Berlin to collect the skulls of 20 compatriots who died under Germany’s colonial rule in the early 1900s.

German scientists took the heads to perform experiments seeking to prove the racial superiority of white Europeans over black Africans.

The skulls were uncovered three years ago in medical archive exhibits.

A ceremony was held in the German capital to return the remains as a gesture of reconciliation.

But chaotic scenes accompanied the speeches, particularly an address by German Deputy Foreign Minister Cornelia Pieper.

A handful of demonstrators shouted “reparations”, “apology” and “genocide”.

Germany has consistently refused to pay reparations to its former colony, arguing that it has given much development aid to Namibia. But Namibians at the ceremony said the aid had not reached them.

Earlier, Ueriuka Festus Tjikuua, a member of the Namibian delegation, told reporters: “We have come first and foremost to receive the mortal human remains of our forefathers and mothers and to return them to the land of their ancestors.”

The skulls belong to 20 people who died after an uprising against their German colonial rulers more than 100 years ago.

They were among hundreds who starved to death after being rounded up in camps.

Some of the dead had their heads removed and of these, about 300 were taken to Germany, arriving between 1909 and 1914.

The skulls gathered dust in German archives until three years ago when a German reporter uncovered them at the Medical History Museum of the Charite hospital in Berlin, and at Freiburg University in the south-west.

German researchers believe the skulls belong to 11 people from the Nama ethnic group and nine from the Herero.

They were four women, 15 men and a boy.

‘Nazi forerunner’

Mr Tjikuua said the mission intended to “extend a hand of friendship” to Germans.

Namibians, he said, wished to encourage a dialogue “with the full participation and involvement of the representatives of the descendants of those that suffered heavily under dreadful and atrocious German colonial rule”.

Charite spokeswoman Claudia Peter said the purported research on the skulls performed by German scientists had been rooted in perverse racial theories that later planted the seeds for the Nazis’ genocidal ideology.

“They thought that they could prove that certain peoples were worth less than they were,” she told AFP news agency.

“What these anthropologists did to these people was wrong and their descendants are still suffering for it.”

(Source: )

July 29, 2011
Germany Passes More Aggressive Renewables Law, Bucks Rumors

Despite economic retractions, Germany continues to lead Europe in balancing economic efficiency, environmental progress, and energy security

March 14, 2010
My god it’s cold…

I seem to have left this out in my last entry about how different Germany would be from the rest of the travelling I have done… it isn’t tropical. Beyond that, it isn’t subtropical. Actually, it’s freezing… today it spontaniously started snowing and things because a slushy sticky mess within half an hour. It turns out the beautiful stone walkways that make Berlin such a charismatic city aren’t all that conducive to traction when wet. But, now that my griping is out of the way, I have to say this.

Berlin is one of the most amazing cities I have ever seen.

For starters, it has a 24 hour club scene. The more I reflect on this, the more rediculous it seems. I got home from partying last night at 8AM, but that was only after my hosts and I reluctantly decided not to visit a second club for a few hours. Everyone keeps telling me I’ll have to come back in the summer, and I am prone to agree.. without the cold, going out in Berlin would be exceptional… there are parks everywhere, hundreds of clubs, and DJ’s New York couldn’t shake a stick at. Oh, and daylight till 10:30 PM.

Of course, there’s also the history, which I suppose is what makes me love the city so much. To walk along the remaining segments of the Berlin wall, hear a concert in the former headquarters of East Berlin’s notorious Stazi, or visit some of the world’s best museums of Ancient and Islamic history is truely a treat.

But right, my hosts (who are absolutely fucking awesome) and I are off to a Russian vodka bar now. Bye!

Andrew

March 13, 2010
The trip of ultimate weirdness

So, I am taking a strange vacation. Which is interesting, considering the fact that what makes it seem strange to me is pretty much exactly what makes a normal vacation for everyone else I know. This trip has taken virtually no planning, required no security preparations, and doesn’t represent a likely risk to my health or life. I probably won’t come back with intestinal parasites. My mom isn’t at home having nightmares about Congolese rebels. My sister isn’t coming to visit me and stay in a terrifying cinder block YWCA with an angry matron. Instead, I am just going to look around in Germany.

I’m about 30 minutes away by plane now, and it is just a weird feeling. I really enjoy travel, but pulling off the trips that I tend to take is quite a stressful and planning intensive process, whereas this has been anything but. All I know is that I am meeting a total stranger off of the internet in a couple of hours, that I intend to sleep in his house, and that I have no idea how to find that house.

Beyond the planning, interesting issues of race and whatnot come up. I look central European. I have the deep-set eyes, blondish hair, bone structure, etc etc. Even though I’m on a continental airlines flight, the attendants speak to me exclusively in German, even after I respond to them in English. I had a little taste of this in the Netherlands, but Germany might be a bit more intense, partly because I look the part (and ethnically, I suppose, am closer to being the part than any other ethnicity) and partly because I will be here even longer.

So, yeah, this trip is strange… I’ll have to be much more careful than usual about budgeting simply by virtue of being in a more expensive location, but beyond that, I think I’ll really be able to “fly by the seat of my pants” in a way that I have not, generally, had the opportunity to do! So that is exciting.

Also exciting is that I got into Columbia’s Teacher’s College, which is most definitely the most respected teacher training institution on the east coast, and possibly in the country. They produce some of the most cutting edge research on ed, and I will be able to take electives with some of my favorite history authors. I truly don’t know what could be better.

Anyway, I’ll do my best to keep things up to date as I get back into travel mode!

Andrew

December 18, 2009
Further reflections on Frankfurt

So, it’s a little bit funny. I’m sitting here right after I uploaded my last post, and I suddently think I love germany. I signed off and realized I needed to find some food someplace before I had to board the plane, and found a really nice bar on a weird lower level of the airport. Besides the disgusting fact that I was having a liter of beer at 4 am philly time, it was actually quite nice. People were talkative and laid back and whatnot.

Germany seems cool, cause it strikes me as a very individualistic society much like America, but with some substantial cultural differences. I am starting to want to take a trip to Europe soon as a break from all the 3rd world travel, though it is obviously much more expensive. Still, I think the balance of travel experiences in both places would make things worth it.

I spent a few days in Amsterdam this past summer due to a flight cancellation on my way to Nairobi, and I liked very much, being able to walk around and not stand out immediately or anything. In Germany it was a little more pronounced, because everyone who saw my name (flight attendants, airline people, bartenders processing my card) would immediately start speaking in German to me, but it was sort of funny and, in a way, served as a conversation started, although it forced the conversation out of their language….

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