Yearly Archives: 2004

What We’re All About

On the second day of Christmas, an undersea earthquake generated huge tsunamis. Inured as we have become to death in these recent years of terrorism and war, the number of dead across the Bay of Bengal is shocking. As I write this, the toll stands around 120,000, with predictions that the number could double through […]

“Zapata Vive!”

After eighth grade, I thought I was through with nuns forever, but one can never tell where the ways of life will lead and so on our recent trip to Mexico, Adrienne and I put ourselves voluntarily (albeit apprehensively) into the care of the Benedictine Sisters of Guadalupe. These women – short, brown and radiating […]

The Future of NAFTA

I’m just back from Mexico. Not the Mexico of gleaming beaches and gringo-oriented resorts, but poor Mexico, where a decade of the North American Free Trade Agreement has taken a terrible toll. I visited Mexico City, the largest city in the world, with 25 million inhabitants. Mexico, the country, has 100 million inhabitants, so one […]

Shell Game

The theme of the December 6 issue of Newsweek magazine is “Health for Life” and the cover lists several articles about health, but who cares? The real action is in the ads. The “book,” as they say in the business, is 98 pages long and contains 15 full-page ads for pharmaceutical drugs. Promotions include treatments […]

Eleven Months Later

On January 1, I wrote in this space that 2004 would be the year that determines whether democracy survives in the U.S. With less than a month to go, three stories from the front section of today’s Washington Post give us an idea of where we stand. On the front page is a story about […]

Decoding the Turkey

Sharing a meal is the oldest of rituals; the first hominids to share food with those beyond their family group took the first – and probably largest – step on the path toward civilization. What a transcendent act it must have been, 20,000 years ago, to give away food. It’s not surprising that eating or […]

Welcome to the Monkey House

After a week of intense fighting, often at close quarters, it now seems the remaining insurgents are being driven from the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency. That’s what this is all about, isn’t it? It’s astounding, that even at this late date, one can read “thought” pieces in the mainstream media urging George […]