Ben's Blog
Friday, March 25, 2011
Adultism
Friday, February 25, 2011
9/11
The causes for 9/11 were that it was The World Trade Center, which is the building that is the head of our economy. Also another cause for this was, because the terrorists were looking for an important building in the U.S with a lot of people in it. That is why they tried the Pentagon, and the White House too. The effects of 9/11 are almost as tragic as the event. There is now a ton of security everywhere, no one is trusted to do anything, and especially Middle Eastern people can’t go anywhere without people looking at them funny, and thinking they are terrorists. It has also had a big affect on me, I am now afraid to fly on a plane, especially one going to New York. This is a big problem since my family lives in New York and we go there often. Although, I am afraid to fly it has also had an affect on me since I am also one of the people who judges Middle Eastern people. I know I shouldn’t and I am trying not to, but it is scary to me since 9/11 was so personal to my family and me.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Tri-State Water Wars Liam/Ben
After the Chattahoochee River enters Florida it becomes the Apalachicola River. By the time the Apalachicola enters the gulf it is very low and polluted. If too little water flows into Apalachicola Bay then salt level increase. This was especially bad during the drought of 2007. The high salt levels kill oysters and other animals caught in commercial fishing. This threatens the lively hood of the fisherman and ruins the local economy because commercial fishing is one of the most important businesses in the region.
Citations:
"Georgia Once Prayed For Rain, Now Plans For Drought : NPR." NPR : National Public Radio : News & Analysis, World, US, Music & Arts : NPR. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=125190243>.
"Water Wars Background — Alabama Rivers Alliance." Alabama Water Rally Online Registration Is Open! — Alabama Rivers Alliance. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://www.alabamarivers.org/current-work/water-wars>.
"Tri-State Water Wars History." Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://www.chattahoochee.org/tri-state-water-wars-history.php>.
"Tri-state Water Wars: Act Now on Water Contingency Plans | Ajc.com." Atlanta News, Sports, Atlanta Weather, Business News | Ajc.com. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://www.ajc.com/opinion/tri-state-water-wars-527806.html>.
"Tri-State Water Wars." Southern Environmental Law Center. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://www.southernenvironment.org/cases/tri_state_water_wars_al_ga_fl>.
"Arguments Set in Tri-state Water Wars Case." The Augusta Chronicle. Web. 13 Feb. 2011. <http://chronicle.augusta.com/latest-news/2011-01-26/arguments-set-tri-state-water-wars-case>.
Saturday, February 5, 2011
WATER
Ben Siegel
World Today
February 5, 2011
There are many water issues facing every part of the world today. A water and sanitation has hit our world and has caused a lot of health problems, and deaths. A lot of statistics are mind blowing like the fact that 884 million people don’t have the access to safe water. A person from the U.S taking a five-minute shower uses more water than a person in a slum uses in a whole day. Also, one last crazy statistic is that the water and sanitation crisis have taken more lives than any war has with guns.
Although this is such an intimidating issue people are doing a lot to help, and it is making big impact. For instance, in 1999 a seven-year old kid named Ryan Hreljac heard about the water crisis in Africa and started a foundation called Ryan’s Well Foundation, which puts water pumps in Countries where there is not access to safe water. Ryan is not the only one, after hearing about what he could do many other people have made a pledge to help this issue also, and are making a difference.
About 12% of the people worldwide don’t have access to safe water and as a result of water related diseases more than 3½ million people die every year. There are more than 1 billion people who don’t have access to sanitation facilities at all. One way to try and resolve some of these problems would be to invest in safe drinking water and sanitation facilities everywhere. If water systems were improved around the world the number of missed school days would decrease by nearly 300 million. The conservation of water would also help in terms of more water preserved plus the sanitation systems would work better.
There are a few ways that we as a class can help this global crisis. One is that we can spread the word, meaning tell everyone what’s going on in the world in which they live. Second, we can fundraise for Ryan’s Well and other organizations like that. Lastly, we should educate people on this horrible topic, by going to schools or places where we could speak and tell everyone how big of an issue this really is and that everyone should help.
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Australian Open 1/26/11
Ben Siegel and Celeste Padula
The Australian Open is one of the four tennis tournaments that make up the Grand Slam, the others being the French Open, the US Open and Wimbledon. They are the biggest and most prestigious tournaments each year, but the Australian Open holds the record of the highest ever single-day night/day attendance. Australia has hosted a tennis tournament since 1880, and in 1969 the tournament was first called the Australian Open. It is the first Grand Slam tournament of each year, held in the middle of the Australian summer, on the last fortnight of the month of January.
The Australian open used to be played on grass until the year 1988, when they switched to hard ground courts. Mats Wilander is the only male player to have ever won on grass and hard courts. The two main courts used in the tournament have been named Rod Laver Arena and Hisense Arena.
Even with all the flooding that has happened in Australia recently, the tournament will still be held in an Australian city. Currently, 5 different Australian cities have ever held the Open and two New Zealand cities, despite the name, the ‘Australian’ Open.
This year, as in the past several years, American tennis fans have hoped that Andy Roddick, the top ranked American man, could win the tournament, even though there are many other good younger male players. There have been a lot of discussions and comments made by former top players about whether or not the American men can ever be the top ranked players again. A lot of pressure is always placed on Roddick.
Two big stars of the Australian Open are Federer and Nadal. Former American tennis star Andre Agassi said, “It is not brain surgery to realize how much they’ve (Federer and Nadal) dominated,” Agassi told NPR. “But what I am sort of suggesting across the board, globally speaking, is that tennis has gotten much more competitive.”
Agassi also stated that court surfaces are a reason that the American men are not able to keep up with some of the best players from around the world. Americans tend to play with a Clay court instead of Hard courts used in the Australian Open. Clay slow down the ball and produce a high bounce, taking away the advantage of big serves. Clay courts are cheaper than the other types of court like Hard and Grass. Learning how to play tennis on a Clay court is a disadvantage to Americans because out of the four Grand Slam tournaments, the French Open is the only to use Clay courts.
Andy Roddick, the last American man in the 2011 Australian Open Draw, lost in the fourth round to Stanislas Wawrinka. This is the first time since 1987 that there has not been an American man in the quarterfinals of the tournament. At the time of the loss, ESPN analyst Patrick McEnroe said that, “He [Roddick] has been thoroughly dominated tonight.”
While there are always some upsets in every tennis tournament, most people predict that Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal will play each other in the final round for the championship. Nadal is ranked number 1 in the world. He has won the last 3 Grand Slams and is going for four, which would mean winning the Australian Open. The last person who won the four Grand Slams in a row was Rod Laver in 1969. It looks like Nadal could do it but the last time Nadal lost in a Grand Slam event was in the quarterfinal round in the 2010 Australian Open. Since Rod Laver, the Grand Slam record holder, has a stadium named after him, so a win by Nadal could give him one as well.
www.espn.com
http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/event_guide/history.html
http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2010/09/03/from-the-baseline-us-mens-tennis-searching-for-answers
http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/news/articles/2011-01-24/201101241295867813865.htm
http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/news/articles/2011-01-24/201101241295867813865.html
http://www.wtatour.com/page/Tournaments/Info/0,,12781~836,00.html
http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/news/articles/2011-01-23/201101231295746864454.html
http://tennis.india-server.com/australian-open/history.html
http://www.npr.org/2011/01/16/132975282/Flooding-Doesnt-Dampen-Australia-Open
Monday, January 10, 2011
World Today
Ben and Celeste
Despite the recent news about the potential risks of the Measles, Mumps, Rubella vaccine (MMR), there are many benefits of the vaccine, which seem to cancel out many of the risks. As with all vaccines, the most significant benefit is not getting the illness and the side effects are typically mild. Fewer than one in a million suffered a severe allergic reaction from the MMR vaccine. However, if one doesn’t vaccinated and, for example, does get measles the risks are; developing a rash, cough, and a fever. In a more severe case one may contract pneumonia, seizures, or even death.
In 1998 a British surgeon named Andrew Wakefield wrote an article that was published in the British Medical Journal where he claimed that there was a connection between the MMR vaccine and autism. Now scientists have concluded that this was a deliberate misrepresentation. It has now been shown that a law firm hired Dr. Wakefield to provide scientific evidence that the vaccine caused autism. That firm paid him $750,000 for his work, which it now has been shown was false. Mr. Wakefield, also known as Dr. Wakefield until the British General Medical Council stripped Mr. Wakefield of his doctor license, published an article in The Lancet in 1998 saying that the MMR vaccine could cause autism for your child. Last year in February, The Lancet retracted the article after all the controversy it was getting, but perhaps a little to late.
“When his article was published, all the parents took it very seriously,” said Alison Singer on CNN. “Taking away the vaccine didn’t lower the risk of autism, but made the children more vulnerable to other diseases.” After the article triggered a boycott of the MMR vaccine in Britain, the immunization rates crashed to 80 per cent.
Mr. Wakefield is now at the possible risk of criminal charges. In his study on autism, Mr. Wakefield had ‘in an unmistakably intentional way, altered the data to produce a result that wasn’t there,’ said the BMJ. Over two-dozen other studies prove that Mr. Wakefield must have changed something to get this false answer. Mr. Wakefield, though, continues to defend himself, saying that he didn’t transform the answer into something else, and that he would never do such a thing.
Dr. Richard Besser (my best friends dad!), ABC News Senior Health and Medical Editor, recently wrote an article entitled “The Fallout of Fruad” about Dr. Wakefield’s fraudulent study. Dr. Besser stated, “I’ve worked around the globe and have watched children die from measles, meningitis, tetanus and other diseases that could have been prevented had there been access to vaccines.” While Besser was clearly bothered by Wakefield’s study questioning the vaccine safety, he also stated that, “the journal had a responsibility to more thoroughly review a paper presenting such a novel theory.”
Even though Dr. Wakefield’s study has been shown to be false, there are parents of autistic children who will always believe that the cause of the autism was a vaccine or a combination of vaccines. A lot of research money is being spent on finding out the cause of autism and how to prevent and cure this disease. Hopefully, a cure and treatments will be found, and that not too many parents will shy away from giving vaccines to their kids. The benefits of vaccines have proven to far outweigh the risks.
It is hoped that parents will be reassured that vaccines don’t cause autism. Dr. Besser said, “study after study that tried to verify Wakefield’s hypothesis found no connection between vaccines and autism. Scientifically, the issue has been laid to rest. Convincing the general public of the safety of vaccines is a task that may fall to those experts who take up the cause in the popular media.”
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Editorials/1221024.html
http://amfix.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/07/the-mystery-of-autism/?iref=allsearch
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40930256/ns/health-mental_health/
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/dr-bessers-notebook-autism-vaccine-link-fraud/story?id=12555692
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002026.htm
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Ben and Celeste
January 5, 2011
Conflict in Ivory Coast
On October 31, 2010, Alassane Ouattara challenged Laurent Gbagbo for the Presidency of Ivory Coast. This election was very close and ended with a run-off that was held on November 28, 2010. The runoff was very close, and in the end the country’s top elections officer declared that the former president, Laurent Gbagbo, had lost his power to Alassane Ouattara. Gbagbo, mad at losing his presidency, refused to give up his power. As a result of Gbagbo’s reaction to the election and his anger, the people of Ivory Coast are taking sides and causing violence in the streets. The natives there are scared that they will witness and be a part of a second civil war.
The day after the news of Ouattara’s win, the head of the Constitutional Council, a close ally of Gbagbo, threw out the vote totals from parts of the north (the base of Ouattara’s support) and claimed that Gbagbo was the winner, causing both men to claim presidency.
Then another sign of Gbagbo’s anger over his 45% to 55% loss to Ouattara was when he then closed the borders down and blocked all foreign television stations. The next night 8 people who supported Ouattara were shot and killed by automatic-weapon-toting gunmen at an opposition party headquarters.
The former president still has support over the army and is brushing aside threats to leave office from neighboring countries, which are expected to have to go to using military force if Gbagbo doesn’t leave soon. Ouattara is now barricaded in a hotel with the help of the United Nations peacekeeping troops, angered by Gbagbo’s stubbornness.
Since most of the citizens are not armed, they have cleverly decided to bang their pots and pans together to make it sound like gunshots. One lady named Edwige Tonete, who is so scared to even step outside of her house, talked to CNN about these recent days in Abidjan. Edwige Tonete is just old enough to remember the last recent civil war in Ivory Coast, which took place in 1958. She told the CNN reporters, “I don’t want to live like we did.” Tonete speaks for all Ivorian people when she says that, those that lived through the last civil war and those that were either not born or not old enough to recall it. Without saying anything specific about the conditions during the last civil war, it was clear from Tonete’s tone and the fear in her voice that no one would want to live through something as frightening as a civil war.
Not surprisingly at all, the United States and a few other countries have stepped up in this situation of horror in Ivory Coast. They have recruited a large number of soldiers to help with a United Nations peacekeeping force in Ivory Coast. Another thing that the U.S has done alongside the U.N, the European Union, the African Union, and some West African states is create a group called ECOWAS, Economic Community Of West African States, which has gotten together with the electoral commission to peacefully convince to Gbagbo and his supporters that Alassane Ouattara is the winner of the election, and that Ouattara is now the President of Ivory Coast.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/23/AR2010122305481.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/04/world/africa/04ivory.html?_r=1&scp=4&sq=ivory%20coast&st=cse
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-30/world/ivory.coast.impact_1_ivory-coast-laurent-gbagbo-abidjan?_s=PM:WORLD
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/world/africa/03ivory.html?_r=2