Tuesday, 29 April 2008

THEM!




'Population Explosion Is Far More Feared Than A Nuclear Explosion?'

   All human fears, from stuff as microscopic as germs to titanic event like the end of the world. Fear can paralyze us to cease functioning as a person, or it can drive us to overcome it, bringing out the best of our human struggle against our inner adversity. During the span of the decades, there has been fear mongering on global crisis such as the overpopulation and the threat of a nuclear attack. While world leaders like the United States and the United Kingdom have policed the stability of international politics suggested that a nuclear war is unlikely to happen soon, the staggering growth of the human population is multiplying at such alarming rate that it is happening even as we speak! So, is population explosion far more feared than a nuclear explosion?

   The rationality of our fear is usually exacerbated by our mass media experiences. For instances, movies like ‘The Sum Of All Fears’ and ‘The Peacemaker’ presented a horrific threat of a nuclear warfare. Popular science fiction also soothsay the apocalypse following an atomic carnage in ‘Dr Strangelove’ and ‘Akira’. These imaginative portrayals of a nuclear attack fuel the fear of the audience with descriptive mental pictures of radiation burns and agonizing deaths. I was especially struck with the grotesque tale of Hiroshima bombing in the Japanese manga ‘Barefoot Gen’ where defenseless children were left in the wake of the aftermath to survive amidst death and destruction.

   Our historic memories in World War Two where nuclear bombs were dispatched over the Japanese cities had shown us that the threat is indeed real. Images of real survivors relating the tale of the bombing had us reminded that had it been a different time, it could be us instead. And that possibility is not very difficult to materialize give the on going atomic arms’ race in our world now. The victory with superiority in nuclear warfare of the Second World War not only had propelled the United States to a superpower nation, but also encouraged the rest of the world to follow suit if they want to survive the next world war. Current world leaders are struggling to arm themselves more powerful and destructive nuclear war machines. We had witnessed in daily news of how Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, India and China fighting in place to match nuclear capability to that of the United States. The Cuban Missile Crisis has also presented that the threat of a nuclear war is indeed very imminent.

   In contrast, the danger of overpopulation doesn’t appeal to us instinctively like the perils of a nuclear explosion. There are no grisly scenarios illustrating great destruction in loss to fire and radiation. However, population explosion has reasons to be feared in the long run. Pessimistic economists had forecast that soon the world food supply could no longer match the exploding human population’s demands. Such rapid growth will stripped the Earth’s resources and affect humans’ well being as well. Our increase dependence in energy will render us to cut down more trees and mine for more resources. Such vicious cycle will lead to further deforestation, the loss of species and pollution of severe magnitude. Populous countries like China and India now face water deficits. Severe examples would be the malnutrition and hunger leading to death of millions of children in Africa.

   Overcrowding harms the environment by putting more pressure to accommodate our existence. The upsurge in population while not taking measures to ration our exploitation on Nature pollutes the Earth by altering the atmosphere composition, contaminated water supplies and even changes meteorological processes like El Nino, La Nina effects. Ex United States’ vice-president now turned environmental activist Al Gore has his fair share of criticism in the inspiring documentary ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ explored how we had damage our planet beyond damage. And it is easy to amplify those damages with population explosion. Do we really want to leave a planet of filth and full of overcrowding to our own children, a bill that no one could ever repay?

   Perhaps some might find it hard to relate to the environmental and resource issues mentioned above as they might seemed like problems that would happen in underdeveloped countries or far ahead in a distant future. But the ground zero of the population explosion is actually the cities. Overcrowding often occurs in the cities where people gathered to work the economy; it deprived them of privacy, stressed their well beings with noise and air pollutions, and suffocated them during rush hours and holidays. There were simply too much people to be around with! It can injure mental health and cause problems like anxiety, panic attacks, depression, thus impairing their social functions. Overcrowding also leads to high unemployment rates, inequality and illiteracy should the population becomes too much to organize. Poverty and crimes could also add on to the mounting social problems that a population explosion has.

   However, optimistic economists had suggested that overpopulation should not have to be a menace as illustrated above if global cooperation and individual responsibilities are made to control population. Well distribution of resources across the world, the use of contraceptives and birth schemes are examples that can keep the troubles of overpopulation in check.

   In conclusion, while population explosion could affect billions of livelihoods in the long run, a nuclear explosion is far more feared than it. Vivid images of a nuclear holocaust from both fiction dramatization and historic memories of a nuclear warfare struck a more imminent threat compared to theoretical catastrophes of a population implosion in the future.   



Sunday, 27 April 2008

Poll.

'The population explosion is far more feared than a nuclear explosion?'

Population Explosion
 
 2

A Nuclear Explosion
 
 6


Sunday, 20 April 2008

Hope Is Chickenshit


The speed of light is 186,282.397 miles per second.

The speed of crestfallen is seven minutes.

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is fucking overrated. Only 5% of all resuscitation survive, marginally. Most of the time, we were there just to bear witness to their deaths. Our muted eulogies wasted on futile efforts in cracking their chests. For once I would like to see we make a difference.

I did. For seven shitty minutes.

She came grasping into air. As I tore away my face mask and snapped away the latex gloves when her heart stabilised, I told my colleague, 'She came back.' The golden words of the marginal 5%. Statement of the year. Mine.

Seven minutes later, she crashed and die.

That's how long it takes to experience crestfallen.

Hope is chickenshit.


Sunday, 6 April 2008

On A Distant Shoreline She Waves An Arm At Me


When you are alone, you are pretty much silent. And when you have come to terms with your quiet solitude, you realise that your silence is a collective conscience. There are indeed many quiet stuff around you. The trees in the nightshade. The molten glow clinging onto streetlamps. The breathless basketball courts and soccer fields under the stars. The sea to the sands and the buried seashells. The car parks. The empty schools. The blinking red men in traffic lights at four in the morning. The swings in the playground, probably weeping with the earlier rain. The books in the cage of the dark stores, one stacked among the thousands of others. The little animals and insects attempted to hide out from the night's cold. A cough. Your shoes shuffle in the dark as you contemplate stuff like these. Your thoughts are with you.

Hence, you are not alone.



Friday, 4 April 2008

A Healthy Heartbeat


There are actually books on going green.

Shit, how ironic.

I do get bangs out of irony.

Mostly these days I only communicate in single sentences. I figured out if generations later decides to quote me, it will make their lives easier.

Here's one on my job -

'At the end of a day in Nursing, sometimes it makes you feel like bits of meat dangling from the bone.'

Here another one on books -

'Borrow only the little ones, buy big books.'

I'm really into it.

Yesterday for the entirety of five hours, I have only this to say -

'Be Kind Rewind at five pm, ticket for one please.'

Only two cinemas in the state were playing Michel Gondry's Be Kind Rewind. There were only three persons in the cinema. Me at the back row and a smooching couple a distance away. Three of us? It's Gondry, for Pete's! Sitting at the back row enjoying the film, I realised that I don't have much in common with people around me. That's probaby why I hated everyone, every stupid one of them.

It's not as if I get bangs out from speaking in single sentences.

Because all it takes is barely a line if you are going spend it all on yourself.