Life In Japan: I Love Snow

I grew up and lived the first half of my life in Michigan. There, over the entire three months of winter, there’s tons of snow! Usually it snows at least twice a week, sometimes every day. I had a love-hate relationship with winter. I hated the chapped lips, the chapped hands, the frozen fingertips and toes, the constantly runny nose. At the same time, when it snowed it was SO BEAUTIFUL! Being out in a gentle snowfall is truly delightful. The snowflakes tumble and swirl, land on your skin and melt, and fill the entire air with a joy which is incomparable.

Then, of course, there’s the really fun stuff. Building snowmen — I guess ‘snow persons’ is more PC — having a friendly snowball fight, even shoveling the walk and drive, though hard work, had its rewards. Then, when the wind was right, the snow would drift. My last house in Michigan was a fairly large Dutch colonial with a balcony. Sometimes the drifts which accumulated against the house were two to three (6 – 10 feet) meters deep, so we’d jump off the balcony and end up with snow up to our eyebrows.

My best memories of winter were my childhood, specifically when I was 12, 13, 14. I’d ice skate every day after school on one of the many ponds which naturally occurred in the fields behind our mobile home. There was snow everywhere and if there was fresh snowfall, the skating session had to begin with shoveling the ice. Once enough of the surface was cleared, we would skate under the sky or canopy of clouds, until we couldn’t feel our toes any longer. My dad made me a hockey net and I practiced and practiced. I got good enough that when I was 14, I went out for a hockey team and became first string center!

Enough nostalgia.

Japan gets its share of winter. The northernmost prefecture — a prefecture is the equivalent of a state — is Hokkaido. It has weather very much like Michigan, with tons of snow. Hokkaido has a fleet of snow removal trucks, just like the Midwest in America. And great skiing!

But where I live, the winters are very mild. This year has been cold but lacking much snowfall. It snowed a couple times but only lightly, and the temperature was mostly above freezing, so the snow disappeared within a couple hours of appearing.

Two years ago, we had some serious winter storms. I reached into my photo archive. This is the neighborhood where I live two years ago.

And here are some photos of a walk I took then to our local shrine.

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However, I have to close with a slight correction. Here I am writing about not having much snow this year. But I waited an extra day to finish this article. Ironically, overnight we got a major blizzard and it’s still snowing! I would guess we’re going to get 2-4 inches, which to be sure is a lot for this town. So far it looks like this . . .

I tested it. It’s great packing snow, perfect for a ‘snow person’.

Gotta go!

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Alisha Idlewild Performs “War Is Making Us Poor”

California folk-rock artist, Alisha Idlewild, performs “War Is Making Us Poor”. The talented Ms. Idlewild offers her fans a variety of songs, touching on the environment, human relationships, the rights of indigenous people, spirituality, and world peace.

Her voice has a sweetness and sincerity that reminds me of the antiwar songs of the 60s and 70s. Enjoy!

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The Boll Weevil Bluegrass Band Performs “War Is Making Us Poor”

What is this? Techno hillbilly? It’s definitely unique. Bluegrass with an anti-war message. Boll Weevil takes the stage!

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Sarah Shipley Performs “War Is Making Us Poor”

The lovely and talented Sarah Shipley sings out against war in this country version of my newest antiwar song.

Thank you, Nashville, for your wonderful contributions to our musical heritage!

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‘Meggie’ Taylor Performs “War Is Making Us Poor”

Rapper “Meggie” Megaton Taylor recorded my new anti-war song.

He’s a big guy with a big voice!


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Is it possible to rehinge the unhinged?

Please watch as much of the above video as you can handle. Dancing around the room is not only permitted, it is highly recommended!

Here are the lyrics to this happy bit of pop music fluff . . .

A recent article in RT  tells us about the song. “The track was recorded by 11-year-old Svetlana Chertischeva, known as Betsy, and 12-year-old Maria Yankovskaya, two rising stars of Russian music. Released in November, the track was initially popular among elementary and middle schoolers, but later gained popularity among adults, and has since been featured in a number of meme videos.” 

Okay . . . now the juicy part.

A member of the European Parliament from Germany, former school teacher turned social psychologist/politician Nela Riehl, is claiming: “’Sigma Boy’ is a viral Russian trope used on social media, which communicates patriarchal and pro-Russian worldviews, only one example of Russian infiltration of popular discourse through social media.”

It appears to me that we have to read an awful lot into these vacuous lyrics, quite typical of pop music faire, to find the cultural abominations Riehl is referring to. It seems like a bit of a stretch, for example, that ‘Skittles’ and ‘Snickers’ are Trojan horses for embedding love of Russia and deification of Putin into the minds of young music fans. And ‘get into my Bentley, get into my Beauty Box’ are seeds to destroy the West’s embrace of neoliberalism and love of democracy? Are we to regard ‘And you’ll make me yours someday’ a forecast of some sort of demon possession, the demon being Russian culture?

Riehl is so off-the-rails, I have to wonder if the brain damage is permanent or not. Is there any way to “unhinge” such a whacko?

Evidence of this pandemic of lunacy is also everywhere here in the US. Hatred of Russia and Vladimir Putin has reached epic levels. For anything resembling normalcy and productivity to return to our national conversation — and hopefully our foreign policy — we as a nation must return to our senses. Those would be the five senses which allow us to view and embrace reality.

The challenge is formidable. I do regular postings related to my War Is Making Us Poor campaign on social media. Sometimes the responses from Americans is discouraging, if not shocking. I posted my video indictment of Vlodymyr Zelensky on over 110 allegedly progressive Facebook political groups and got comments like . . .

“This is russian propaganda”

“This is utter bullshit. Fuck Russia, Fuck Putin, Slava Ukraini”

“Hey..shit poster… so what part of Russia are you from ??”

“This is one of the more disgusting posts I’ve seen recently. How would you have played the hand Putin dealt him? Ukraine invaded Russia? Get real.”

“This reads as a translation from a Putin propaganda hit piece. It’s ridiculous.”

“This needs to be taken down! ASAP”

“You’re fucking insane.”

“This site seems to have been taken over by Meta trolls”

Obviously, animus toward Russia is running very high. Here are some stats from Pew Research Center . . .

“Roughly six-in-ten Americans (61%) label Russia an enemy of the U.S.” 

“Americans overwhelmingly rate Putin negatively: 88% say they do not have confidence in the Russian president to do the right thing regarding world affairs.”

These negative sentiments are shared across party lines . . . 

“Republicans and Democrats are about equally likely to say they view Russia unfavorably (88% vs. 87%), although Democrats are more likely to have very unfavorable opinions of Russia.”

No doubt about it. The Deep State campaign to smear Putin and create fear and hatred of Russia has been extremely effective.

And I worry . . .

There’s a threshold where brainwashing becomes more of a lobotomy and is irreversible. I fear many Americans have crossed that threshold and are permanent residents of Hate-Russia-La-La-Land. There may be no effective remedy.

We might be able to mitigate the impact of such colossal ignorance. I’m just not sure we can mass produce enough of these . . .

Posted in Deconstruction, Nihilism, Political Analysis, Social Commentary, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

War is making us poor?

Since 2006, I’ve been in 35 countries. Total over my lifetime is 44. I’ve been in extremely wealthy countries with sky-high standards of living — Sweden, Norway, Monaco, Switzerland, Austria — and been personally immersed in extreme poverty — Uganda, Kenya, Laos, Cambodia, Philippines, Myanmar, Nepal. When I was in Kenya, I lived in a community called Mbita, that had no running water, no electricity, and we went to the bathroom in a hole in the ground. I bathed with the locals in Lake Victoria. All I had to bring was a bar of soap and a towel. But we had to be on guard. The local hippos were temperamental and often very aggressive.

Granted, compared to the extreme poverty in Kenya and other 3rd World countries, for most people life in the US is luxurious.

So . . . how can ‘war be making us poor’?

‘Poor’ is a relative term. The US constantly trumpets itself as the richest country in the world, the richest country in history! And via carefully compiled spread sheets prepared by neoliberal economists, we can find strong evidence for the claim.

However, facts on the ground for millions of American citizens, tell a different story.

The simple truth is that, yes, there are a handful of Americans who are doing incomprehensibly well. They have vast piles of money, huge stock and property portfolios, accounts in tax haven countries bulging at the seams. But this is at the very top of the economic ladder. This opulence and affluence is not shared with 99.9% of the rest of us. The brutal truth is, wealth inequality has become so extreme, it has gutted our economy of vitality, undermined what used to be a diverse and robust manufacturing base, inaugurated “casino capitalism”, i.e. rabid financialization and speculation, and stranded ordinary citizens without what many other countries consider the “basics” of a healthy functioning society. For everyday people, while they may not have to bathe in local streams and lakes, these changes — which only benefit the wealthy elite — have made life increasingly difficult. Opportunities are disappearing and for the middle and working classes, just surviving and maintaining an acceptable living standard has become an increasingly daunting challenge. 

Travelers from America, gone for extended periods of time and traveling in some of the better-off countries — including, by the way, Russia and China — report being shocked when they return to the US . . . shocked at the condition of our basic infrastructure, by the filth of our cities, by the level of homelessness, by the general quality of life they see. They are shocked and appalled by the level of anxiety, depression, and often anger and hostility which has become the norm. People are anxious, confused, frustrated, often frightened.

I’m not going to compare the US with Bangladesh or Haiti. Or Monaco or Switzerland. But I think it’s realistic to contrast what the US has become, first, to what it claims to be; and second, what it, as the “richest country in the world”, by its own reckoning should be.

I suggest you read my book. It’s very eye-opening. It’s not just a catalog of misery. It both takes aim at the primary cause of our economic malaise and decline — endless war, unnecessary and accelerating militarization of our society — and points the way for citizens to directly intervene and reverse the disintegration, before the US can no longer function as a nation. 

The decline is almost imperceptibly gradual but there’s no doubt about what’s happening: War is bankrupting the US politically, spiritually, socially, and economically.

We can do better.

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Happy New Year! (from Japan)

Ten years ago, I wrote a song that I call my “holiday greeting to the world”. I played all of the instruments and my wife and I performed it in my modest home recording studio. Then I made a video.

Since then we have seen humans plunge into more violence, more brutal inhumanity, death, destruction and suffering.

I wouldn’t change a word of what I wrote back then. In fact, its message is more vital and timely than ever. We need to embrace one another in what unifies us as a species, not destroy one another over differences which in the grander scheme of things are irrelevant, if not petty.

As we approach 2025, may I wish the best year ever for you and those you love!

By the way, ’akemashite omedetou’ means ‘Happy New Year’ in Japanese. Here are all of the lyrics to the song:

1st Verse:

It’s a very special time of year / For family and friends holiday cheer / For those no longer with us / We shed a tear  / A time to share / A time of feast / A time to care / And pray for peace  / A time to give to those who have the least

Chorus:

Merry Christmas? / Happy Hanukkah / Peace be with us / Happy New Year

2nd Verse:

This is the time to start anew  / Atheist Christian Muslim Jew  / To reach within and find the love inside of you  / Discard the old seek out the new / Reject the false embrace the true  / To look ahead decide to bring out the best in you  

Choruses:

Merry Christmas / Happy Hanukkah / Peace be with us / Happy New Year

Akemashite omedetou / Peace be with you / Happy New Year

Merry Christmas / Happy Hanukkah / Peace be with you / Happy New Year

© Copyright 2014 – Words and music by John Rachel, produced for Dancing Needles Music – ASCAP (All rights reserved.)

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Life In Japan: Christmas Season . . . Osaka

I read the other day that to serve some twisted notion of “inclusivity” and political correctness, a country in Europe has officially discouraged calling the Christmas holidays ‘Christmas holidays’, instead recommending ‘Winter celebration’ or some variation on that.

How odd! I won’t even get into the absurdity of this example of the culture war mentality or the arbitrary havoc wrought by cancel culture. It’s odd to compare this mentality with what is commonplace here in the East.

Christmas display in Beijing.

Christmas display in Beijing.

As I’ve written about before, my experience living and traveling Asia, has been that Christmas is celebrated with sheer enthusiasm and unabashed fervor in places like Japan, Vietnam, Thailand, South Korea, China, even Cambodia.

Santa arrives in Cambodia!

None of these are close to being Christian countries. They are basically Buddhist. And China, Vietnam, and Cambodia are COMMUNIST COUNTRIES. Yet, their godless populations openly embrace the Christmas festivities, seeing nothing contradictory or offensive.

Christmas in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

Granted, these celebrations are basically secular, sans mawkish religiosity. Hey! What’s new? Christmas is in America and much of the West just an orgy of spending on gifts, excessive amounts of food and libations, and piling on glittery decorations. Santa is not a religious icon, and I don’t remember seeing Mary and Joseph, votive candles, and frankincence at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, which officially kicks off the Christmas season. Visa and Mastercard each had a float.

Japan does Christmas in style. This year we went to Osaka and two floors of the huge Hankyu Department Store were Christmas themed. There was every holiday gift item from all over the world there. Here are just a few pics of the event . . .

No Images found.

And a short video . . .

Honestly, while I don’t need to hear “Jingle Bells” ever again — and yes, this and many other Christmas songs play over and over in all of the places I shop during December — I think that embracing holidays and festivities from other cultures is the way to go. It doesn’t in any way diminish the relevance and charm of indigenous celebrations. It adds color and variety, gently providing contrast and perspective on the rest of the world.

I don’t know what the culture cancelers in the West are thinking. It seems they’re lost the narrative. You know the one . . . it’s called fellowship, appreciation and respect for the vast variegations which make the human species so fascinating. And might offer us salvation.

The alternative is suspicion, division, distrust, tribalism, hatred, and of course . . . war.

Isn’t a Christmas tree preferable to a mushroom cloud?

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What Do Mermaids Eat? . . . Deehl

Deehl was very quiet. Finally she said …

“I’m kind of shy.”

Hmm. What could she be shy about? I tried to second guess her.

“You speak English perfectly!”

“I haven’t said much … but thanks. That’s very sweet.”

“Just stating fact.”

“Hmm. I don’t want to confuse you. But …”

“But what?”

“Just because you hear English doesn’t mean I’m speaking English.”

That’s all she said.

I really had to think about that. I still do, as a matter of fact.

I studied philosophy in college. What she pointed out refers to the paradox of perception. When I see the color red, is it the same color — meaning the actual color that appears in your vision — as you see?

Maybe I’m in truth writing this in Chinese. But you see it on the page and read it as English.

So … to those of you who want to know: Do they speak English?

All I can now say is: That’s a very good question!

What I do know is that mermaids are very smart. And at least the ones I met — with a few exceptions — are phenomenal cooks!

Do you want to hear more about my unique adventures? How about having your own copy of my book?

As I mentioned before, the ultimate deluxe full-color paperback is available for a limited time — sale extended until January 2nd! — for 25% off the regular price . . . order it here directly from the printer.

By the way, this stunning fantasy/travel/cookbook is also available as an ebook, in the format of your choice . . .

JUST DO IT!

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