Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Drop the plastic bag!

In Korea (as in all over the world), plastic bags are everywhere. Buying fruit or vegetables? You need a plastic bag to stick the price on. Buying tofu? Put it in a plastic bag. Food to go? Plastic bag. Buying goods? Plastic bag.

Even when you’re buying a bag, they give you a plastic bag.

And in Korea, many cashiers INSIST that you take one. I remember saying “no, it’s ok” five times while a lady kept smiling and saying “service!” (it’s free) Me taking the plastic bag was part of being a satisfied costumer and she wouldn’t let me go without it.

While the plastic bag issue has been a serious concern in every single country for quite a while now, some nations have made a great effort at minimizing its use.

After all, it takes hundreds of years for one plastic bag to decompose.

In France, for instance, grocery stores don’t even have plastic bags. You forgot to bring a bag? You must buy one for a few cents. Back in Quebec, some grocery stores give you a discount when you bring your re-use your plastic bag. I've also seen bio-degradable ones, that still take a while to vanish though.

In Korea, they charge you for it. And while it’s a good initiative, 5 cents really doesn’t matter when you buy 200$ worth of food…

Meanwhile animals are choking on plastic bags. Plastic bags all everywhere you look, strewing the ground, stuck in trees, hiding in dark alleys and floating in the ocean. Yet plastic bags are still produced every single day.

The same could be said of plastic/glass bottles, ridiculously thick plastic packing, and everything else we consume for that matter. Dumps are overloaded with our trash, and the space is getting scarce.

Just a thought: drop the damn plastic bag!
10 cents for one of those? No way. How about 10$ for every plastic bag? Then we’ll think about it twice before taking it...


Pictures: Google images
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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Jazz me real nice!

Nina Simone improv on the piano with her musicians... totally made my day!

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Pepero

In Korea, November 11 (11/11, like four Pepero sticks) is as important as February 14th in Western countries - it's what they call "Pepero Day"!

It's a day when you give to the one you love. But you don't just give any kind of chocolate. You don't give flowers. You don't give a heart-shaped gift. No.

You give Peperos!

Peperos are candy sticks from the oh so famous Korean/Japanese (conglomerate) brand LOTTE - from Lotte World (theme park) and Lotte hotels, to Lotteria (fast-food restaurant), Lotte mart, Lotte gum, Lotte candy and Lotte Giants baseball team.

Thus Pepero day is really Lotte day. It all started in 1983, the year I was born. A real commercial scam, but kids love it and Lotte gets wealthier. Everbody wins.
Picture: Google Images

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Thursday, November 8, 2007

Chunks of life

Halloween was last week and I had totally forgotten about it. Fortunately Mr. Lee gave me a bag full of crap, I put up a powerpoint with witches and ghosts, and it turned out to be quite fun!







Koreans don't celebrate Halloween like we do, but it's growing on them. And they know that this holiday means "candy! candy! candy!" So I gave them oranges :)

The next week-end I went to Dongmun market - a huge place where they sell everything, from cheap clothes to weird fish and pig heads.







The weather here is still warm (around 20 celcius) and, as you may know, it's now the oranges season in Jeju. They are all over the place... tasty and cheap.



On Sunday we went to Samsunghyeol- a freakish place near my place. It's like an outdoor museum with three giant holes in the ground. Koreans believe that three Gods emerged from those holes many many years ago, and they built Jeju. Each year a ceremony takes place at Samsunghyeol to give thanks to those Gods.



We also visited one of Jeju island's number one spot: Yongduam! It's a big rock shaped like a dragon's head and... you really have to want to see it because it's not that obvious! According to the legend, a dragon envoy of the Dragon King was sent to Mt. Halla to pick a herb which would give eternal youth. But a mountain god shut into the sea, and only the head protruded above the sea. And it became Yongduam.



As you can see, smart Korean women took over the area around the rock in order to do business. They mainly sell sashimi (raw fish).





On an unrelated topic, I'm finally moving out of my moldy apartment! Will post pictures soon, especially for those of you thinking about visiting. Looking forward to this week-end cauz i'll be hiking halla mountain and teaching my dentist some French (he asked me!)

I'm also about to book my flight for Bali en February!! Bali baby! :)

Oh and here's the building where I work out: can you see the door?!?! Looks suicidal...

More of my pics: http://www.bubbleshare.com/album/261498

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Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Going under the knife for a better life?

As I walked down one of the main streets in Gu-Jeju, I started fearing for my own safety after 3 people passed by, one after the other, with a bandage on their left eye. It looked as if they had been victims of some physical assault and, worst of all, they were all coming from the direction I was heading to.

As I ran into my friend Amanda, I saw 4 more of them coming our way. “That’s 7 in not even 10 minutes,” I thought. Most of them looked relatively young (under 30) and seemed alright – no bruises, hair perfectly in place, no ripped off clothes… they appeared to be peaceful.

We turned around the corner and there it was, written in gigantic letters, in both Korean and English: PLASTIC SURGERY!



As it turns out, plastic surgery (especially nose and eyelid) is huge in Korea. If you haven’t noticed, Asian features differ from Occidental’s and that apparently isn’t something to be proud of.

Moreover, Koreans tend to be very superficial (i.e.: women go hiking in their high heels with make up on!) and a lot of them idealize American culture. So plastic surgery is just the way to go.

Most Koreans also undergo a very restrictive diet at least once a year in order to stay thin or skinny. There’s actually a skeletal Korean woman working out at my gym and she spends over an hour pedaling on the stationary. Most Korean women I know complain about their size.



And as if this wasn’t enough, they believe that men are judged more on their ability than women are. So even if a female student at a famous school has graduated at the top of her class, if she is considered unattractive, the chances of her finding a good job are slim. So instead of attending classes that might enhance her skills, she is busy improving her appearance with cosmetic surgery appointments and visits to the gym.

Believe me, I’ve seen it. Especially in Seoul.


A Korean friend of mine got her degree in English lit from a well-known University but she is a little overweight. She had problems finding a job and her entire family said it was because of her size. Indeed, what company would want an average woman to interact with its costumers when they can get miss skinny who just underwent surgery?


Well get this: her parents ordered her to come home in order to lose weight. They wanted her to stay with them, be on a diet and exercise every day. You probably all know that in Korea parents are always right.

Fortunately for my friend, she got hired in a company 2 days before she was supposed to go back home!

Koreans get perms, undergo nose and eyelid surgery, going as far as liposuction. They believe that if your face is beautiful, then your heart also becomes beautiful (!!)

The rate of the general public going under the knife is currently at about 13 percent in Korea, while that in the United States is less than 3 percent. Plastic surgery has become so popular that the government even introduced a "reasonable" bill last year to reissue national registration cards to those whose appearance has changed as a result of plastic surgery!

Koreans can now reshape their ears with an octoplasty; eliminate wrinkles, blemishes and unevenly pigmented or sun-damaged skin with a chemical peel, change the shape of their face with facial implants; or go for a rhytidectomy - the classic facelift - in which the sagging facial skin is tightened and redraped over retoned facial muscles.

Today the typical Korean face (small, slanted eyes, round face and high cheekbones) can be dramatically altered to achieve the preferred Western look: all you need is 1-1.5 million won for the eye job, and 4-5 million won for bone shaving.

What's scary is that younger teenagers are going under the knife - often a gift from their parents who want "the best" for their children.


Koreans can also smooth out forehead wrinkles for 4-5 million won, enhance lips for 1 million won, augment breasts for 5 million won or have liposuction done on the stomach, thighs and calves for 2-3 million won.

While more than half of the surgeries performed involve the eyes (57 percent) and removing wrinkles (30 percent), the most popular procedure in Korea is the double-eyelid operation - the creation of a fold on the eyelid!!

But plastic surgery can be addictive and a lot of Koreans now crave it like I used to crave Nutella back in college.

Plastic surgery also enhances one’s chances of becoming a celebrity. According to a recent survey of 200 entertainers by Seoul-based plastic surgeon Lee Kang-won, 38.5 percent acknowledged that their looks had been artificially changed at an average of 1.42 operations.


And to think that when we die, all that flesh just rots in the ground.

PS: you might want to check out the very lame Korean movie "200 pounds of beauty" - in which a fat girl undergoes surgery and subsequently becomes famous. In the end she tells everyone she used to be fat and they all love her and, you know, she cries. Classic. The actress is perfect for both roles haha

source: internet but mainly http://www2.law.columbia.edu
pics: google

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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Toxic china


a.k.a. why fair trade matters to you ;)

Ah China! A quarter of the world’s population. A cool language that’s tattooed on people’s arm. Martial arts, Confucianism, Chinese food! But when we think of China, the most famous icon is “Made in China”.


Look at your Nike shoes. Your dishes. You coffee mug. Your DVD player. Your pencil sharpener. Your car. It seems like everything is made in China – from ridiculously cheap goods, to the most classy and expensive ones.

I guess this is one of the things human beings have in common: “Made in China”.

But why not all switch to “made from a clean place with basic standards and where human rights are respected”?

Here’s a list of recent Chinese exports that have been re-called because they were safety hazards:

1. Lead Toys
1.5 million toys recalled because the surface paint contains lead, a toxin that's dangerous if swallowed (can damage brain cells). Toys were sold at Fisher Price, Toy’r’us, Mattel, Barbie, etc.

2. Kerosene eyeball toys
In June 2007 in the US a ghoulish fake eyeball toy made in China was recalled after it was found to be filled with kerosene (!!??)

3. Toxic toothpaste
FDA has identified several brands of toothpaste from China that have been found to contain a poisonous chemical called diethylene glycol (DEG). The products typically are sold at low-cost, “bargain” retail outlets.

4. Tires that split
In New Jersey 450,000 tires were recalled after the company disclosed that its Chinese supplier had stopped including a safety feature that prevented the tires from separating.

5. Scooters’ handlebars falling off
In L.A. 20,000 electric scooters because of fears welding work could cause the handlebars to fall off.

6. Kids choking on Starbucks cups
Starbucks children's plastic cups made in China reportedly fracture easily, leaving sharp edges and broken pieces that pose a choking or laceration hazard to children.

7. Crayons and paint
Toys R Us have recalled 27,000 Chinese-made paint and crayon sets after the wooden box packaging was found to contain lead.

8. Cribs where kids die
1 million Chinese-made cribs were recalled following reports of three infant deaths and entrapment; suffocation concerns.

9. Logger boots?
Electrocute yourself!9,500 pair of Caterpillar Logger Boots were recalled because they were improperly labeled as resistant to electricity - they aren’t.


10. Kill your adored pet with Chinese animal food!
More than 60 million cans of cat and dog food were recalled after the deaths of 14 animals. Wheat gluten — an ingredient in commercial pet foods — was contaminated with the chemical melamine, as well as rat poison.

11. Kill your baby with counterfeit formula!
Chinese consumers have also suffered from contaminated food products, including the death of infants fed with counterfeit formula.

12. Even spinach!
Frozen Chinese spinach was recalled after exceeding levels of chlorpyrifos, a pesticide, were found in the vegetable.

13. Chinese honey = cancer?
Chinese honey revealed traces of an antibiotic called chloramphenicol in ten out of 16 samples. In larger doses chloramphenicol can cause cancer. It is also considered a contributory factor in developing aplastic anaemia, a rare but serious blood disorder that affects 50 to 100 people a year in the UK.

14. Fake labeling
Up to 2,228 tons (nearly 4.5 million pounds) of Chinese honey was shipped to Australia and then re-exported to the United States in the 2001-02 financial year at a time when the U.S. had banned Chinese honey.

15. Genetically Enginerred rice
Greenpeace announced that non-approved genetically-engineered (GE) rice has been detected in Heinz's Baby Rice Cereal and the environmental group called for an immediate recall of all the contaminated products.

16. Dyed egg yolks, really!?
Some farmers in China injected an industrial dye, suspected of causing cancer, into eggs to make the yolks look fresher. Farmers also injected chemicals into mangos to have them ripen sooner or into strawberries and apples to make them more reddish; fishermen used malachite green, a suspected carcinogen, to treat freshwater fish to make them appear fresher.

17. Flammable pajamas
New Zealand launched an investigation into Chinese garment imports after children's clothes from China were found to contain dangerous levels of formaldehyde concentrations - up to 900 times above the safe level in woolen and cotton clothes.
Formaldehyde — a chemical preservative that gives a permanent press effect to clothes and is also used as an embalming fluid — can cause problems ranging from skin rashes to cancer.

18. Toxic syrup
Toxic syrup from China is responsible for causing over 300 deaths.

19. Contaminated bibs
Winnie The Pooh (sold at Toys’R’Us) vinyl baby bibs appear to be contaminated with lead.

20. Even leukaemia drugs are not safe!
Chinese authorities have ordered the recall of two contaminated leukaemia drugs blamed for adverse reactions among child patients. Several child leukaemia patients experienced difficulties in walking after being injected with them. The drugs had also caused urine retention among some leukaemia patients.

21. Toxic exports to Thailand
About 10 percent of 11,500 Chinese food products entering Thailand's northern border have been rejected or destroyed because they were contaminated with hazardous toxins. The products rejected at the Thai border included dried shark fins, seasoned seaweed and artificial sweeteners.

22. Contaminated seafood
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is detaining imports of farm-raised seafood from China because they have repeatedly been found to contain residues of drugs not approved in the US for farm-raised aquatic animals.The products affected are catfish, basa, shrimp, dace (a relative of the carp) and eel imported from China.


23. Toxic rice in everything?
Illegal Genetically Engineered rice has contaminated food in France, Germany and the UK. Greenpeace offices and Friends of the Earth in the UK tested samples of rice products such as vermicelli, rice sticks and other processed foods. Five positive samples were found containing an illegal GE organism not approved anywhere in the world. However this may only be the tip of the iceberg. Rice products are included in everything from baby food to yoghurt.

24. Green tea…
Green tea from China found to be contaminated with alarming levels of pesticides.

25. Chinese medicine… not the cure?
A toxic herb that can cause kidney failure has been found in commonly-used traditional Chinese herbal medicines, the government has revealed.

26. and the list goes on…

I browsed the web for a few hours to find all this stuff out (refs. are at the end) and a lot of articles questionnned whether China is trying to poison America. But as it turns out (that would call for a whole other entry) China is also poisoning its very own population with the same/similar problems.


And let’s not get into the air pollution issue – which, by the way, brings yellow dust in Seoul in spring, making it hard to breathe, leading to throat problems and itchy eyes. I know, I was there last year!



About 75% of U.S. toys are now made in China. Today China is responsible for about 60 percent of all product recalls from the US, compared with 36 percent in 2000. Should they be scared?

The owner of a Chinese toy factory identified by Mattel as the maker of the lead-tainted toys involved in a million unit recall committed suicide inside his factory. According to the article on BBC, dishonored officials commonly commit suicide.


~refs:
www.silentscourge.com
www.nytimes.com
www.acbnews.go.com
www.consumerist.com
www.fda.gov
www.bloggingstocks.com
www.blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com
http://www.bizjournals.com/losangeles/
www.forbes.com
www.bbcnews.com
www.money.cnn.com
www.usatoday.com
www.epochtimes.com
www.alertnet.org



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Monday, October 29, 2007

One

Well I have been sick for over two weeks now, and I’ve been feeling quite down lately. As it turns out, mold has been growing in my apartment and it’s getting pretty gross. And I’m afraid this might be one of the reasons why I’m still sick. I googled mold-related health problems and it’s not pretty!

So anyway, last week-end I decided not to go out and I even missed the Halloween party at the Blue Agave. Instead, I cruised around the island and spotted amazingly cool and beautiful places.





It felt incredibly good to get out of the city and gaze at cows and horses chilling out in the countryside. I can’t tell you how great I felt as I wandered in some forest (just like back when I was living in France!) and looked at the sun shine on fields, grass and everything that’s beautiful down here on earth.



And then I made it right. Then turned left. And straight up a hill. That’s when I saw this gigantic cemetery – some sort of ancestral memorial park filled with countless graves. It was both impressive and scary. The silence was heavy yet refreshing, and the vastness made me feel dizzy but also incredibly free.





I wandered in the graveyard for a while, captivated by its atmosphere and grandeur. Meanwhile a friend texted me, inviting me to a Korean body-building competition, and I thought that was an amusing coincidence – people investing so much effort and energy on the body that’s merely a way of carrying their soul, when in the end, this body… this “temple”, will end up decomposing somewhere in a cemetery, with worms feeding off it.

That’s when it hit me: the perfect unity of everything that exists! The cycle of water, the cycle of life. How we become mere compost and bug food once we’re dead – which in turn nourishes the earth that grows the food that we eat. We are all connected and that’s beautiful.



Everything else just seemed so irrelevant at the moment; glitziness, materialism and cupidity… I just wanted to be surrounded by nothing but nature for as long as I would remember. Ironically, the view from the mountain was on Jeju city and the light brown skyscrapers never looked so hideous.

I thought about pesticides, GMO, computers, TVs, alcoholics and drug addicts. I thought about plastic bottles, trash and the lead in plastic toys “made in China”. I thought about candy, greed and the horrible smells coming from the exhaust of the cars in front of me when I’m driving my scooter in traffic. I felt nauseous. I felt sick of myself. I felt like we’ve lost sight of what’s important, of what’s GOOD. Long time ago.

I went back home to my mold and couldn’t sleep that night. I spent an hour meditating at a Buddhist temple but it didn’t help. I feel so little. So helpless. So corrupted and so sick of whining in vain.



The next day Doug gave me this book about Greenpeace and I got even more depressed – it related the history of nuclear energy/weapons, including the “gadget” Einstein warned Franklin against, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and too many other nuclear “tests”.

Well you know what? History can be pretty sad but in the end, I really do feel like we are all connected –hurting one of us (humans, animals, plants) is like hurting us all. The illusion of invulnerability is a dangerous one that has corrupted very ambitious men and women who blindly act without thinking about the impact/consequences of their actions. We’re like robots living in a crazy world and when I stop and think about it, it scares me.

Enough with the pain and suffering. What is wrong with us? And enough with the mold in my apartment dammit!



More of my pics: http://www.bubbleshare.com/album/255329

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Monday, October 22, 2007

More korean beauty

First of all, I’d like to introduce my ABC students because they are so cute! The little one down right is Bob (and he chose that name!!)


So, last week-end was great. Friday night we had dinner and wine up until 5am, so Saturday I was basically lethargic. Nonetheless, I took advantage of the beautiful sunny day on Sunday and decided to go to Udo. I missed the pumpkin festival but apparently it wasn’t worth it anyway.

As you know, I live in Jejudo – an island south of Korea. Udo is another island, just West of Jeju. It’s quite small, but gorgeous! Moreover, a lot of women divers live and work there, and some of Korea’s most beautiful beaches are on that island.

It was an hour scooter ride, and then a 20 minute boat ride to finally get there. I just walked around, hiked a nice hill on a cliff, sat on the beach and cruised. Many women divers were working (on a Sunday?) and, even though the weather was really nice, the air was cold and so was the water.










I met on of them on the street – she was sorting out her picks of the day and she barely looked at me. I noticed she had something in her ears so I spoke louder, offering her a banana. She was thrilled and gave me some of what she had in her bucket… I still don’t know what it is, but it was viscous and slowly moving in my hand. I took a bite, it was alright. I offered her water but she repeated a thousand times “choua! Choua!” (“cold!”) so I thanked her and left.






Here is some more Korean beauty.

































More of my pictures (yes, you see the world through my eyes ;) at http://www.bubbleshare.com/album/250795

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