Entries Tagged 'Book review' ↓
December 2nd, 2008 — Book review, Organic food
by Rhona Mahony. In The Jungle Effect, Daphne Miller has described her travels to places in the world where very few people get sick with heart disease (Crete), Type 2 diabetes (Copper Canyon, Mexico), depression (Iceland), colon cancer (Cameroon), and cancers of the bowel, breast, and prostate (Okinawa).
She is a family-practice physician in San Francisco. Her immigrant patients pointed out to her the contrast between their traditional diet and superior health when visiting relatives back home and their regimen of donuts and weight gain after coming back to the U.S. Dr. Miller decided to follow the clues herself.
In the disease “cold spots” that she visited, she found people eating the foods that their great-grandparents had eaten, prepared in the old ways. The animals they eat also live as they did 200 years ago, either wild or domesticated but unconfined.
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June 6th, 2008 — Book review, Guantanamo, Surveillance, War on Terror
by Rhona Mahony. Marc Falkoff came to Stanford University last week, on May 29, to describe his Guantanamo clients.
Like his colleague on the speakers’ panel, Anant Raut, he wore a fine suit and looked like a prudent member of the legal establishment. He is now a professor at Northern Illinois University’s law school. When he began to work for Guantanamo prisoners, he worked at an expensive law firm, Covington & Burling. I learned something immediately: Covington represented Fred Korematsu, the Japanese-American man whose internment during World War II was upheld by the Supreme Court in 1944 in Korematsu vs. United States. Continue reading →
May 29th, 2008 — Book review, China, Surveillance, War on Terror
By Rhona Mahony. Marcus Yallow lives in San Francisco in 2010. He is a 17 year-old high school student who likes to program, tinker, and play an elaborate game, part puzzle and part race, whose clues are hidden on the Internet and about the city.
One afternoon when he and his friends are skipping school to play the game, the Bay Bridge explodes and collapses. The Department of Homeland Security arrests Marcus and his friends as suspects in the bombing. After all, they are not where they should be. Their pockets are full of electronic gadgets, some encrypted. Marcus politely asks to call his parents to arrange a lawyer. Instead, a sack goes over his head, the drawstring is pulled tight, and he is loaded onto a boat and, hours later, off of it. Nameless government agents question him roughly for days. When he is set free, back on the sidewalk in San Francisco, his city has changed. All communication is recorded: land lines, cell phones, email, the Internet. All movement is monitored: by closed-circuit televisions, automobiles’ electronic toll booth passes, traffic check points, and frequent ID checks of pedestrians. One of Marcus’s friends was injured when they were arrested and wasn’t released with them. Where is he? Is he still alive? Marcus vows to use his technological creativity to rally the young people of San Francisco. They must thwart the lockdown. They must make adults understand how destructive and how ineffectual it really is. Continue reading →