Many persons were puzzled when the president of N. Korea referred to the president of the USA as a "dotard." But he is perfectly correct as a dotard is simply a retard in his dotage.
Monday, September 25, 2017
Saturday, September 23, 2017
Flamingo Gardens
Some trees are over 200 years old |
One place
that apparently had a lot of tree and plant damage was Flamingo Gardens in
Davie and today ( 23rd September) was the first day they were reopening
section of the gardens to the public.
These
gardens are an important section of the Everglades Wildlife Sanctuary and are
home to a myriad of birds, butterflies and flora.
The aviary
is the most impressive I have ever seen with a large variety of owls, eagles,
pelicans, storks, birds of prey and of course huge spectacular flamingos.
The great thing
I like about Flamingo, is that these gardens are also a refuge for Florida's
small, native wildlife that have been hurt. They rescue, nurse, heal them
and if they are able, return them to the wild or else they remain at this
sanctuary.
I love that
aspect of the gardens but it is really mainly a botanical garden which was
established in 1927 and once had over 3000 species of rare and exotic,
tropical, subtropical, and native plants and trees. Some of the magnificent oak
trees which thankfully are still standing are in excess of 200 years old.
So while
only about two thirds of the garden was open to the public today, it is still
extremely impressive.
A bobcat sleeps in his cage in a tree |
There is
also a museum which had been a weekend retreat of the Wray's who used it in the
1930's and later donated the property to the state.
.
Thursday, September 14, 2017
TV networks failing viewers
According to recent reports, twenty four people were killed on the USA
mainland during the onslaught of hurricane Irma from Friday 9th-10th
September 2017. However if there was a way of testing it accurately, I would be
prepared to bet that more people died from stress-related illnesses like heart
attack and strokes, as a result of how the major television networks reported the progress of that hurricane.
Because for almost a week before hurricane Irma was even due
to descend on Florida, the major networks went of a feeding frenzy implying almost
ad infinitum, that the annihilation of the
state was eminent. The unnecessary
scare tactics and language used by the leaders in electronic media had a toll
not only on Florida residents but also on their family members in other states
and abroad.
Yes, it is true that Hurricane Irma with winds registering
at times as much as 195 miles per hour, was the largest and most dangerous to develop
in the Atlantic and threaten the Caribbean region, but did the media need to
start spreading panic about the “certain doom” Floridians faced, long before
the path of the hurricane could be determined?
Yes they could have started informing and warning residents
about the possibilities but did they need to compete so fiercely to see who
could use the most inflammatory language to create irrational fear among their
viewers? I don’t know if they realize it, but millions of Floridians have relatives
in other states and all over the world from and as far back as Monday 4th
September, the type of sensational seeking reporting that prevailed, almost
totally convinced viewers that their family would be wiped off the face of the
earth, if they did not leave the state.
The sad part, was the fact that while the press was creating
this false impression and paying attention to remote possibilities concerning Florida, Irma was venting its anger thousands
of miles away, on small vulnerable island like Barbuda, St. Martin, St. Thomas,
St. Johns, British virgin islands,Turks and Caicos island, the very beleaguered Haiti, Bahamas, and Cuba, killing 36
people as it raged. However, initially, there was nary a word from the major US
television networks about what was happing in the tiny, vulnerable islands, far from the
US mainland, before or while Irma struck them, only, almost grudgingly, after the
fact, while they kept playing up the hype about Florida.
While ignoring the rest of the region too in their
“international news” segments, they even displayed only passing interest to
what was happening to people at their southern border, where a terrible 8.3
magnitude earthquake hit their most important neighbor, Mexico killing almost 100
people.
What “international/world news” can these networks be
delivering?
Further those of us who have experienced many hurricanes and
“real” weather forecasters know that most hurricanes do not normally follow
predicted paths until around 24 or 48
hours before they land, and Irma operated true to form. So reporting designed to cause fear and
panic, instead of information, is counter-productive. They could easily have been
more effective, had they delivered adequate, timely information to the public,
only adding the necessary urgency when the outcome was more certain, instead of
deluging Floridians and other viewers for hours on end, up to a week before the
hurricane was due to land on their shores.
Their fear mongering type of reporting, created unnecessary panic,
even causing thousands of people to move north into areas where the hurricane
eventually headed, putting the “refugees” more into harm’s way than if they had
not over-sold the possible dangers long before they were apparent.
Will the media have
any credibility the next time a hurricane appears to be heading towards
Florida? You tell me.
I don’t know if the performance of most of the journalists
at the major television networks stemmed from the fact that many are too young
to have experienced a hurricane, their feeling
of failure because people in Houston were not adequately warned about the
possible dangers that Harvey posed or just from for hunger for ratings.
Whatever the reason, their performance
this week as the purveyors of “international/world news” has done nothing to
enhance the waning credibility of the US media. Nor in reality have they
demonstrated that are they any different from their president, whose
nationalist worldview and rhetoric about withdrawing from world affairs, many of
those same journalists at the major networks correctly criticize.
Good radio coverage
The radio journalists at WLRN and 93.1 in Ft. Lauderdale did
an excellent job on Sunday September 10th 2017, covering hurricane
Irma and keeping listeners totally informed as it passed through Florida. I
normally keep my dial set on WLRN radio, but it failed after a while and that
is how I ended up with listening to 93.1.
It took a lot of courage for the reporters to be out there
in the midst of the storm keeping us informed while we remained comfortable and
safe in our homes and I thank them.
A little criticism though, I live in Tamarac and
being a Caribbean person, am more or less accustomed to hurricanes, so
was a bit startled at times when I looked through my window and saw the trees
swaying no more vigorously than in a normal storm, while hearing words like
“catastrophic” and “ferocious” coming over the radio as some reporters
described what was happening in my town. I really don’t think reporters need to
exaggerate so much or use irrelevant inflammatory words to scare listeners
during periods like that!
Very little tree damage |
We survived well with only a very few trees losing branches
or falling down totally and must congratulate FPL as we had power throughout.