Saturday, October 14, 2017

What I did yesterday, in three parts




Part 1. Dubai meeting
I’ve had several business meetings lately in Dubai, which still amazes me every time I say that or write it down.  Dubai is still, in my mind, a magical place of legend and mystery.  Of course, I’ve worked in Abu Dhabi for the past year and a half, but I guess I’m more used to it.  The drive to Dubai most of the time is sedate, but it can be wild.  Yesterday morning was lovely and quiet on the road, with very light traffic and very clear air – both of these are rare around here.

Dubai is a massive city that has risen out of the desert in steel and concrete and glass. It is awesome to see and a nighmare to drive through. The main road into and through the city is 8 lanes, and every few kilometers is a mass of exits and ramps and extra lanes and soaring loops overhead. It took me 20 minutes last week to get from one side of the main road to the other, and to find the place I was looking for.

When I get a chance to stop somewhere, I figure I should take a few pictures. My meetings have been at an office in the Marina District, which is about 25 km (15 miles) south of the main city.  Here are a few shots from the yesterday and last Friday. 
One of three buildings in a group where I met
 
The building where I met, 33 stories tall

The view through dusty windows on the 33d floor – the tops of more tall buildings!


A video look at the Marina district from my meeting place

A broader image of the Marina district; note the round object on the left side

The Dubai Eye – under construction since before I arrived here, this will be the
world’s biggest “eye” type wheel attraction.

 Dubai Eye video

Part 2. Ibn Battuta Mall
After the meeting ended at 1 pm I was hungry and thought I’d pop into the mall just down the street a ways. The Ibn Battuta Mall is quite a place, with 7 big courts with displays documenting the travels of Ibn Battuta:

“In June 1335, a young man of just 21 years set out to explore the world. His journey spanned 24 years and six different lands - Tunisia, Egypt, Persia, India, China and Andalusia. Along the way, he survived storms and pirates, served as a judge and scholar, dined with nobles and commoners.

This extraordinary adventurer was Ibn Battuta. His life and travels are an inspiration to us. It has influenced our mall in design and spirit. You’ll see it in the interior themes and names of our courts.  It has influenced our mall in design and spirit. You’ll see it in the interior themes and names of our courts.” 

This place could be a museum and I could spend a week in here to read and study all the displays! And it’s all life size, in massive spaces! Of course, it is also jammed with every imaginable kind of shop. Each court depicts a place Ibn Buttata visited and documented, and his record is still referenced today.  The outside design of the mall also reflects the interior courts, but I don’t have pictures of that because driving here keeps me plenty busy just staying on the right road!

This place is a fascinating, remarkable effort to honor this man and his journey. Remember, it is outrageously, continually BLAZING HOT here for 9 months out of the year, and malls are much more than just a place to go to find new socks. They are gathering places, activity centers, and contain the grocery stores and restaurants in your area. So here are a few images to give you some idea what I’m talking about.

China Court, with a life-size junk in one corner!

Chinese junk


India Court
Life-size elephant and men statue

Persia Court

Ibn Battuta

Egypt Court

      Above and Below. From a display poster: “One of the most effective instruments developed to record and display the movement of the heavenly bodies was the armillary sphere.  The sphere was ingeniously devided to make allowance for the daily and seasonal rotations of the earth on its own axis, and around the sun. It has the ability to plot and measure the position of any observed heavenly body on a centralized three-dimensional celestial coordinate system.” 

Part 3. Walk, cool old cars
This evening I needed to stretch my legs and went out for a short walk. As often happens I heard engines at the Formula 1 track across the street and walked over to see what was going on. There were 6 Porsche Carreras driving around the course. It often happens that a car maker will hire the track and send a team of cars, mechanics and drivers to test or train, but tonight I think it was a local car group just out for fun.

I came across a young German family trying to take a selfie, and offered to help. I took them to a spot with better light and a better view and took a couple of very good shots for them. It’s always pleasant to do something nice for someone else, and they were very pleased with their images.

There were a couple of cool cars on display, so I caught a few shots of them, described below. While doing so I met a very friendly Arabic gentleman and enjoyed a chat for a few minutes. He wanted to know where I was from, how I liked it here, and anxious to ensure that everyone was helpful and welcoming – this is pretty normal behavior for most Muslims.   
 Bentleys on display at the Viceroy Hotel

He told me a story of going to the Four Seasons Hotel in New York, and trying to get on an elevator but the man inside it was frantically pushing the button to close the door. He laughed and said he waited for the door to close, then waited a few seconds for the elevator to have left, then pushed the Up button again. The same door opened, and the same fearful man seemed to dive into his tiny reservoir of courage and stepped aside to allow this fellow to enter. He said by the time they reached their floors they were talking like friends.
Excalibur – a custom car built in the 70s and based on a Corvette chassis and engine.

It's sad that Americans have become so fearful of other people. There’s no need for it. Despite what many political leaders are trying to sell us, we cannot reject an entire region or race or religion based on the actions of a few extreme people.  These people have much more reason to be fearful of coming to America, but they still try very hard to do so. Maybe we should relax and open up a bit and try to be welcoming to them.
  7439 Classic Rolls Royce

 #Dubai  #InbBattutaMall  #ViceroyHotel  #AbuDhabi

Monday, October 2, 2017

What will it take, America?



Another mass shooting in America. This time the target was Las Vegas, at the very end of a country music festival. 50 dead, more than 400 wounded. So far. [Update 3 hours after posting: 58 dead, at least 515 wounded]

This is madness. What will it take?

The shooter planned this well, somehow bringing an arsenal of weapons of mass murder along with plenty of ammunition – all legally obtained, I’m sure – unnoticed to the 32d floor of a luxury hotel so he could fire down into the crowd at his leisure.
(a home arsenal confiscated by police - not related to the Las Vegas massacre)

This is madness. What will it take?

Witnesses (aka targets) heard the shots and thought it was fireworks for the concert. When the band ran off the stage people started figuring it out, and hunkered down where the stood – still easy targets for the shooter, since nobody knew where the shots were coming from.

This is madness. What will it take?

The GOP – ok, wait, let’s call it what it has become, the Guns Only Party – is so enamored of and dependent on money from the NRA (No Remorse Armaments) to stay in office that they have passed into law measures allowing gun ownership by felons, removing limitations on gun ownership from domestic violence offenders and others, and punishing victims of gun crimes if they sue the manufacturers.

This is madness. What will it take?

This week the GOP has intended to vote on legislation to allow the legal sale of silencers for guns. You know, you’ve seen them in the movies. It’s a device so the hero can kill the other guy without anyone hearing the shot. There’s really no other valid purpose for a silencer, and it has been an illegal device since it was invented. But the GOP wants to change that. Why? Because the NRA wrote the bill to allow such sales, and the GOP just cannot turn down that free money. I wonder if they’ll go ahead with their plans later in the week – I’m sure the NRA will encourage them to. They will spin it somehow to make it sound like a good thing.
(another home arsenal discovered by police - not related to the Las Vegas massacre)

This is madness. What will it take?

The right wing religious zealots who are in lockstep support of Donald Trump, the anti-Christ (no, I don’t mean the mythical figure from the Bible’s Book of Revelations – I mean a man who has lived his life as the antithesis of the teachings of Jesus the Christ) just love to blame hurricanes and earthquakes on the gays, but they never seem to notice the leering face of evil looking back at them from the mirror when another crazed gun nut mows down a few dozen of his fellow citizens.  Who’s to blame for this, they’ll lament?

This is madness. What will it take?

The GOP loves to stir up fear and hatred against Muslims, which is an idiotic thing to do but lots of American idiots who have never met a Muslim continue to fall for it. Trump especially loves to instantly throw out the “terrorist” label whenever anyone abroad is hurt, and criticize the government where it happens, but somehow when domestic terrorists like the Las Vegas shooter kill Americans, Trump and the right wing are awfully quiet on the matter.

This is madness. What will it take?

We’ve had Columbine, Sandy Hook, Orlando, Killeen, Virginia Tech, San Bernardino – to name only a few. We had a Congressman shot earlier this year. Every time, the GOP has sobbed in public, shed a few crocodile tears, said they would pray, and then went right back to doing the NRA’s bidding to make it easier to sell more guns.

This is madness. What will it take?

We are trading our lives for one industry’s profits, folks. Is your life worth it? Is your son or daughter’s life worth it? Is your spouse’s life worth it? Because that is who is paid the price last night in Las Vegas to continue pumping money to the gun industry – wives, husbands, parents, children, friends. Innocent people who came together to enjoy a concert.

This is madness. What will it take?

I will tell you what I think it will take. The GOP will never grow a conscience, and they will never act contrary to their own best interests, which means they will continue to take money and advance the NRA agenda.  The solution is action by you and me and all of us. We each have a very small voice in American politics – the rest of the world reveres this voice, and fights tooth and nail for the right to embrace it, even as most Americans just don’t seem to have time to be bothered with it.

But if you are finally fed up, and you cannot take this lunacy any more, there’s something you can do: VOTE.  Register to vote – take the time, make the effort. And then get off your ass and go vote in November. Every November, and in every election.  Let it be known that you will not vote for any politician – Republican or Democrat – who accepts legal bribes from or supports the NRA’s murderous profiteering off American lives.

Be fed up. We’ve put up with this for far too long. Take a stand, go out, and protest. Support political candidates from either party who will act to do something about this murderous rampage going on in our country, and who will attempt to bring back the civility so quickly stripped away by Trump and his cronies.

I will never again vote for a politician who takes money from the NRA. It’s time to get the NRA out of their enshrined position in our government, where they've been too long and don’t belong.

This is madness. What will it take?

#MurderousNRA  #Resist  #LivesForProfits