Posts Tagged ‘america’

Four Ways of Looking at a Bicycle

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

African youth on a bicycle

Here is an excellent article on the importance of bicycles. I’m not riding as much as I would like but I do have my bikes here in Jamaica. I should be taking in some world class mountain biking and instead I’m dragging a trailer with the kids around the beach and West End Negril.

I’m having fun withe the family and the bikes but I’m feeling the need to hit the trails soon. I’m going to start riding more often as soon as things cool off a bit. It’s so hot here in Jamaica that I melted three pairs of shoes into junk last month. I’ll post a pic of that next.

4 Ways of Looking at a Bicycle | Your America | Reader’s Digest

AS A LIFESAVER
Health care workers in Senegal, Namibia, and other African nations usually walk miles over dusty roads to deliver food, medicine, and companionship to people with HIV/AIDS. But with the donation of 1,500 single-speed bicycles by BikeTown Africa, caregivers now visit as many as six times more people in need. The program, a partnership between Bicycling magazine, Kona Bicycle Company, and Bristol-Myers Squibb, has a broad mission: Says Steve Madden, editor-in-chief of Bicycling, “One bike at a time, we can solve big problems and change the world.”

Did you know that Alfie loves you? Tags: africa, Alfred Moya, america, art, Bicycles, Cool Stuff, Jamaica, negril, Pictures, world

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My flag is “Made in America” and so should yours be

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

This is the best idea for a law that I have seen in years. I think it was about 5 years ago I got into quite a heated debate about being American from a flag waving idiot who thought it was a crime for me to burn a flag and question our involvement in the Iraqi war crimes. That argument was won in my opinion when it was pointed out that the flag was “Made in China” and this nut thought it was illegal for “commies” to make the American flag.

It’s not illegal to sell this country out but it should be and this law makes me feel good. The Chinese are poisoning us and have been for years. They have unleashed untold health hazards on us and we might just deserve it for selling this country and our precious jobs out to a billion china men. The Chinese don’t give a fuck for our flag or us and it should be illegal for them to sell us our own flag but the real crime is the American that never bothered to ask if his flag was “Made in America”.

Laws Require Flags to Be Born in USA - TIME

What’s red, white and blue — and made in China? A move is on in state legislatures to ensure that the flags folks will be flying and buying this Independence Day were made on this fruited plain.

Minnesota has passed the strongest measure, a new law that goes into effect at year’s end requiring every Old Glory sold in state stores to be domestically produced. Violations are a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a $1,000 fine and 90 days in jail. In Arizona, schools and public colleges were required starting July 1 to outfit every classroom from junior high up with a made-in-the-USA flag. Tennessee requires all U.S. flags bought via state contract to be made here, and similar bills are moving forward in both New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

The Fourth of July is considered peak season for flag sales with millions of them lining parade routes and flying above back yard barbecues. Most of the major domestic flag makers are privately held companies that don’t release their sales figures, so it’s difficult to gauge the inroads being made by foreign manufacturers.

The U.S. Census bureau estimates that $5.3 million worth of U.S. flags were imported from other countries in 2006, mostly from China. That figure has been steady over the past few years. The big exception was in 2001 when $51.7 million in U.S. flags were brought into the country, most on the heels of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Sandy Van Leiu, chairman of the Flag Manufacturers Association of America, said the imports are cause for concern even though U.S. companies still dominate the flag market. “That door is going to keep opening,” said Van Leiu, a sixth-generation executive at the family owned Annin & Co., a 160-year-old business that supplies retailers like Wal-Mart. “It starts small, then it gets big. You’re just opening Pandora’s box.” To help consumers identify the origin of their flags, the association created a certification program two years ago that bestows a seal-of-approval logo to flags made with domestic fibers and labor.

Whether Minnesota’s law violates international trade agreements — and whether anything would be done about it — is an open question. Under World Trade Organization standards, the U.S. government can’t treat foreign products less favorably than those produced within its boundaries, said Peter Morici, a business professor at the University of Maryland and the former chief economist for the U.S. International Trade Commission. How the rules apply to states is debatable, he said.

Morici said a foreign business harmed by the law would have to get its government to take action against the U.S. government. Robert Litan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank, said while the likelihood of Minnesota’s law sparking a dispute is slim, the symbolic message is hard to miss. “It’s symptomatic of an anti-foreign bias moving through the country right now. It would not surprise me if other states copied it,” Litan said. “It’s hard to oppose politically.”

When the bill was debated this spring, some legislators argued it sent the wrong message to close Minnesota’s borders to foreign-produced flags. “That flag should be made throughout the world because it is our message to the world that there is hope for freedom and justice,” Republican Rep. Dan Severson said at the time.

The law’s sponsor, Democratic Rep. Tom Rukavina, said the flag deserves extra protection. To celebrate his legislative victory, he plans to hand out 1,000 miniature flags at Fourth of July parades in his district. “The biggest honor that you can give the flag is that it be made by American workers in the United States of America,” he said. “Nothing is more embarrassing to me than a plastic flag made in China. This replica of freedom we so respect should be made in this country.”

The new law doesn’t spell out a penalty for violators. In Minnesota, the default punishment for prohibited acts is a misdemeanor offense, carrying up to a $1,000 fine and 90 days in jail.

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Did you know that Alfie loves you? Tags: Alfred Moya, america, Politrix, Politrix

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BBC SPORT | Other Sport… | Cycling | Armstrong cleared in EPO inquiry

Wednesday, May 31st, 2006
BBC SPORT | Other Sport… | Cycling | Armstrong cleared in EPO inquiry: “Independent Dutch investigators have cleared Lance Armstrong of doping in the 1999 Tour de France.

Sweet. I think Lance is the king of road cycling and I would never want to see him dethroned. I am certain he doped but I blame society and his doctors for pushing him to super human feats. The guy has heart and style and has done so much for cycling and America in general that a little doping won’t phase me. I’m glad Lance is publicly clean and the kids have someone to look up to thats worth a damn.
Thanks Lance for inspiring me and many other riders to give a shit. Your Wheaties box from 1999 still sits here on my desk with the cereal inside and I want to keep it that way.

Did you know that Alfie loves you? Tags: Alfred Moya, america, art

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CNN.com - Study finds no marijuana-lung cancer link - May 24, 2006

Wednesday, May 24th, 2006
CNN.com - Study finds no marijuana-lung cancer link - May 24, 2006

Man, I’m glad I don’t have to worry about lung cancer! But wait, how can marijuana be worse for me then cigarettes? I mean thet is what they say right? I guess it must be about who they are. As many of us have known forever pot is not bad for you.

Now, buying marijuana on the streets of America has become dangerous. Not only dangerous but fucking expensive as hell. Makes me want to move somewhere that allows me to smoke my marijuana in peace.

Did you know that Alfie loves you? Tags: Alfred Moya, america

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Jah mekya

Monday, May 1st, 2006
Yeah mon. eryting irie. I just spent a week in Negril Jamaica and it was all good. I’m loving it. My second trip to the island was the best one yet. I had a good time chilling on the beack for 10 days of stress free living. I seem to gravitate to Negril as it reminds me of what Key West could have been. Damn shame whats happening though. You can see the americanization of Negril in progress over the past four years.

I found a great spot to chill right near the beach and spent most of my time in the yard smoking spliffs or soaking up sun and a few red stripes on the beach. I went diving one day which was really cool. I love the ocean in jah, its so damn clear and full of life. The reef was very bleached like most of the caribbean but the bottom was covered with life. I saww some schools of gamefish and a few small cuda as well. It was cool. I was phat blunt stoneded and swimming in 50 feet of turquiose water with a dread instructor and another family with kids. We all had a blast swimming around the Jamaican reefs, it as super chill.

I rented a shack with a pretty diverse group of dudes mainky of euro descent. There were a pair of German doctors that had recently been in Cuba with some great tales to tell of travels in the caribe. Then we had my albania brother Gente and the polish kid whos name I always forget. These guys partied it up rather well with me on a few nights around town. We kicked it up at ladies night on the hip strip which was nice. These guys know how to vacation though, the polish guy was going to be in jah for 3 months and gente was in for like 4 months I think. One of them says he planted two hydro pot plants in his closet back home and yiled was like 8 kilos or some shit. He sold it all in one chunk and went walkabout in jah. Sweetness. Sold two plants and got months worth of vacation out of it. Of course they have no jobs and what not but its all good. They are both young and can take the hit.

I also met a young man named Stefan age 22 from germany also. He is a thinker for sure. Kid has some big ideas in his head about the way things should be. He schooled me on a few things and made me realize its all about fixing myself and living life my way and for myself. Damn the fouls who don’t understand its not about them. its all about me.

Here is what I have learned about Jamaicans. Jamaicans know how to live. Jamaicans know how to love. Jamaicans have no problem mon. good times soon come.

Did you know that Alfie loves you? Tags: Alfred Moya, america, art, Jamaica, negril, rip

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