Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun
Showing posts with label courage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label courage. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Safeguarding Freedom of Expression


         When awarding Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov the Nobel Peace Prize, the Nobel Committee said their journalism, safe guarding the freedom of expression, is a precondition to democracy and lasting peace.
      From the Nobel Committee announcement:
      Free, independent and fact-based journalism serves to protect against abuse of power, lies and war propaganda. The Norwegian Nobel Committee is convinced that freedom of expression and freedom of information help to ensure an informed public. These rights are crucial prerequisites for democracy and protect against war and conflict. The award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov is intended to underscore the importance of protecting and defending these fundamental rights.

Without freedom of expression and freedom of the press, it will be difficult to successfully promote fraternity between nations, disarmament and a better world order to succeed in our time. This year’s award of the Nobel Peace Prize is therefore firmly anchored in the provisions of Alfred Nobel’s will.


            Ressa and Muratov have been abused and attacked by authorities. Colleagues have been killed. They are not alone.
       Journalists across the planet have suffered for their pursuit of facts. It is good these two, who faced down authoritarian dictators and government henchmen, are cited. Ressa and Muratov have been especially courageous. Thousands of others can a share a sense of pride as they too work against lies, authoritarianism, and abuse of human liberty and dignity. 


        A former news director I worked with took a mid career sabbatical to begin a process of visiting the old Soviet Union states to teach news gathering, editing, reporting and broadcasting. He helped to plant the seeds that now challenge Putin and the oligarchs. 
        I worked with and counseled visiting foreign journalists on investigative reporting and documentary work. I made it a point to work with those from authoritarian nations. 
        Bob Campbell and I were just a couple of the legion of American journalists who evangelized the robustness of strong reporting. It is odd and pathetic that practices of dictators and strongmen are now used by American politicians. These include attacks on the Constitution and its foundational principles. 
        The canons and codes of conduct of journalism's guiding institutions have been perverted by "news" services that in truth are propaganda mills and disinformation.


          I've been recalling an assignment to Brazil, after the first elected civilian government in 21 years. We were there after the military government relinquished power. Boarded up newspapers and radio stations were being re-opened and reborn. In the cafes and bars there was talk of democracy and the free press. America was a role model. That was before news by flavor, and all that followed the Rupert Murdoch virus.

telling stories 

        Working in the "news biz" is a ticket to a lifetime of stories, adventures and memorable people.

           It was well after 4:00 and Bob Hoover and I had the double package lead story on the news at 5:00. We had just returned to our cubicle in the police wing following an elevator ride from the Chief's office.
            Trying to block out the noise from the police scanner so I could hear the sound bites and then feed them back to the studio, I heard an unusual clacking competing with Bob's old school typing.
            I looked at him and saw that he'd pushed his dentures forward, out of his mouth and he was chipping them open and closed as he thought of his copy while typing. He was keeping a kind of rhythm. Bob had been a drummer. He was not amused at my chuckle and he kept pounding away. 


            I was punching in and out my Sony cassette recorder listening for the in and out edit points of the news actualities we had just gathered. Bob was at my elbow at our steel case desk, both of us jammed to the walls of our little cube. The emergency and police frequency speaker box was squawking above us as Bob jabbed his index fingers onto the keyboard of his 1920's era portable black Corona typewriter. Bob had been a reporter since the 20's and that old Corona, with it's uneven key strokes, had covered a lot of news. Now some 50 years later he and I were on deadline to report what was the biggest drug bust in Indianapolis history. Lots of money, drugs and weapons had been put on display as the IPD touted the victory. Bob and I were racing to pull it all together for the 5:00 news.





             Bob was a decade past normal retirement, but he could't give it up, the rush, the adrenaline rush that courses through the body as you write and edit on deadline. 
            He was always dressed to the nines and rarely took off his suit coat or sport jacket. After we had reported live and were off the air, Bob put his jacket on the back of his chair, loosened his tie, unlocked the top desk drawer and pulled out a bottle of Kentucky bourbon, which he poured in our coffee mugs. Racing the clock, telling the story, getting it right produces a particular kind of thirst. 
              So does investigative reporting, covering war, murder, child abuse, public fraud, social justice actions, government, disaster, disease, politics, banking, immigration, addiction, zoning boards and the countless other places where you'll find journalists, laboring to keep you informed. 


                            So before the moon is full, raise a toast to all of the real reporters, those whose only bias is for information, facts and who go to war and all of those other places armed only with curiosity, pens, pencils, cameras, notebooks and recorders. 

                        See you down the trail.                       

Monday, March 28, 2016

FEEL FREE TO MOVE ABOUT


"The death of dogma is the birth of reality."
Immanuel Kant, Philosopher

Passport Tenacity
      This is a great planet to travel, if it weren't for a class of human being, the damned trouble makers-zealots and maniacs.
      That suicidal terrorists can strike is something to weigh as travel plans are made, but we hear more frequently "we can't change how we live or they win."
        Heroism can be mustered up in small ways, like courage to live undaunted. Living unfettered of worry, fear and paranoia is no small thing when we do it together. Fearlessness and stoutheartedness are powerful responses.Valor can be an attitude, too. Refusing to dwell on the what if, frees us. After all, it is our freedom the zealots and maniacs target. Determination and spirit can make us gallant to live as we wish, to live free. 

"The tragedy of man is what dies inside him while he still lives.
Reverence for life is the highest court of appeal."
Albert Schweitzer, Doctor, philosopher, humanitarian


Can you see me?
   Joy on a romp in our paperbark tree. Almost hidden.
    Ooops! Busted!

    See you down the trail.

Monday, November 3, 2014

PRECIOUS AND COURAGEOUS

THE PRECIOUS
   Whenever in high country, as here in the Sierra Nevada,
I am forever like a kid on Christmas morning when I spot water.
   A pristine alpine lake or meadow is magical.
   Streams or babbling brooks evoke an undeniable joy.
   I tried not to intrude on the exquisite solitude of this fly fisherman working his line above 10 thousand feet on the Morgan Pass in the Muir Wilderness. But I wondered what was it about this particular spot?
   Why not in that pool to the north?  Up here you read nature in your own way.
    In a season of drought the gentle flow of a stream is a lift for the heart.

   Even the smallest trickle or eddy is a giggle and a wonder.
    These next three frames, taken on the Tioga Pass in Yosemite, display a victorious spirit of life. Notice the dome in the lower left-center just above the distant lake.
   In this zoom you can see trees, growing out of granite.
   As I continued the zoom I grew increasingly amazed at how determined and persistent life can be. Roots that penetrate rock, on a mountain dome, at high altitude in  an inhospitable environment. 
PERSISTENT COURAGE
   Our younger daughter Katherine, a second year nursing student tells us the medical community is trying to raise consciousness about precautions and care in the wake of the Ebola outbreak. Doctors, nurses, staff are better aware and more prepared since news of its jump to the US. There are posters and information packets on hazardous attire, protocol, what to look for, questions to ask and procedures. All of this in the last few weeks.
     Doesn't it seem we are always caught unprepared, for almost any eventuality?  The US was without a Navy, Army and Air Force capable of waging WWII, but responded in short order as American industry and awareness focused on the need and waged a transformation that should still be a matter of pride. Life is messier, more complicated, too political and cranky now, but some have jumped into the breach in this medical crisis and legions more now realize that on any given day, they too could be thrust into a medical outbreak with frightening potential.
     As a father I am of course hopeful my daughter is spared such a reality, though she trains for a profession that is long on courage, mercy and selflessness. We should have the utmost admiration for those doctors, nurses, technicians and logicians who are on the front line.  And a dose of encouragement and/or prayer for lab scientists and researchers who seek medicines and treatments.
     Like that tree up on the dome in the Sierra, persistence, determination and a striving for life can be powerful.

     See you down the trail.

Monday, July 1, 2013

WHAT DO YOU CALL COURAGE?

A LOSS OF HEROES
Photo courtesy of AP/The Arizona Republic-Photographer David Kadlubowski
   With heavy hearts, our thoughts and prayers are with the families of the 19 firefighters who died this weekend in Arizona.  It is the most tragic loss of life in battling wild fires in 80 years.
    I have a couple of friends in Cambria who were firefighters.  It takes something special to do that work. 19 brave souls leave behind grieving family, friends and those they sought to protect. More about them in a moment.
REEL THOUGHTS
KON TIKI
    A lot of guys of my generation had their imaginations stirred by the extraordinary adventure of Thor Heyerdahl on the raft Kon Tiki.  In 1947 he led an expedition 5,000 miles across the Pacific on a raft.  I read the book, watched his academy award winning film and have never forgotten the thrills I sensed.  Now the story is told again, on the big screen and is a superb adventure in a well made film.
     Heyerdahl, like Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay who conquered Mt Everest first, were driven to prove something about the capability of individuals and the power of a vision that challenges conventional wisdom.  To paraphrase something, giant strides for men, even larger possibilities for humankind. 
    There was a time when we celebrated men and women of courage, made them media celebrities and role models. As an increasingly older old boy, I think we should start lifting up medical researchers, test pilots, philanthropists, missionaries and those who challenge the boundaries of knowledge. We can and should divert the spot light away from idols, pop stars, reality exhibitionists, modern celebrities and millionaire athletes.  
    No one paid Heyerdahl, or Hillary or Chuck Yeager, or Jonas Salk millions to put it all on the line.
    And those 19 fire fighters? They were there to protect, save and to do true heroism. I think we are a better society when we recognize our debt to real heroes and when we celebrate true courage.
    See you down the trail.  

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

SCENES OF A LOTUS & COURAGE

HEROIC
It was an extraordinarily moving moment.
Congresswoman Gabby Giffords back on the floor
of the House of Representatives. 
Politics was eclipsed in an act of courage by
a woman who is conquering adversity.
It was one of those moments where awe, emotion
and gratitude just overwhelms.
She is heroic.


AN EXQUISITE BLOOM
       This is one of those gifts of nature that is simply marvelous.  Enjoy these scenes of a Lotus bloom.
This is just the beginning.





Scenes today of an inner light
and brilliance.
See you down the trail.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

CHANGES, CHALLENGES AND THE EXQUISITE ORANGE

THE STATUS QUO
       Education really seemed important, the day I learned the meeting of 'the status quo."  It was elementary school, but it could have been an Ivy League college.  The phrase had the power to transcend. But soon I learned the status quo was more about the past than the exciting future.  Now I'm wondering if I'm not on the road to being a Luddite and too stuck on the status quo.
              Here's the beef.  My old computer and the need to upgrade to quicker and more whiz bang applications.  I love the new technology, I just don't like having to adapt to a new calendar system, new format and abandon a system that has worked just fine.
              Three or four years ago I got a new leather credit card holder-money clip.  It's got a nice sheen of dust on it because the old one, worn, a teensy bit frayed and requiring  an occasional re insert of the metal clip into the leather slot, works fine. Really!
              Plus, I'll be shopping for a new computer soon and I know that is really going to change the old habits. Some days the status quo sounds very comfortable.

PEOPLE WITH MONEY BEHAVING ODDLY
       If you've ever thrilled at the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey circus, we've got a three ring spectacle for you today. You are in your bleacher seat, the lights are low, the spot hits the ring master, in his red jacket and black top hat.



BOB'S STORY
CHALLENGE AND COURAGE
       Frequent readers know that from time to time my former radio colleague and long time friend, Bob is providing updates on his battle with Leukemia.  Here's his latest report.


Friends,

This week's chemo boost was routine; easily tolerated. Diane and I 
toured the Gift of Life Transplant House in Rochester, MN. She will stay 
there while I am hospitalized for my BMT. I will join her during the 
months following my discharge from Methodist Hospital. We plan on a 
combined stay in Rochester of 3 months. Gift of Life is available to us 
for subsequent visits to Rochester, if they relate to my transplant. My 
sister has sent her blood match re-verification kit to Mayo. We will get 
one to my brother yet this week. Our next regularly scheduled Mayo 
appointment is May 31st. We trust we will get the go-signal at that time 
and know when I am to be hospitalized to "condition" me for the 
allogeneic stem cell transplant. Conditioning includes Campath 
chemotherapy and 200 cGy TBI (Total Body Radiation, in case there are 
any radiation oncology fans listening in). We considered a trip to 
northern Japan, but this seemed a more convenient, cost effective 
radiation solution.

"Remain calm. All is well." --Kevin Bacon

Foster




A NATURAL TREAT
A simple story about a joy of living in California.
A story without words, but with great scent.









AHHH!
See you down the trail.