Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Another Great Depression?

If something similar to the Great Depression happened today I would have the most trouble giving up traveling. If we were in a large economic recession I'm sure that my family would stop paying for gasoline. (We can barely afford it now) I hate staying at home and being bored, i would probably start reading books, which would be new to me. Our economy is going into a recession, but hopefully we learned from the Great Depression and can fix our countries problems.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Teddy Roosevelt: Wildlife Conservation

I found a very interesting article while I was researching Teddy Roosevelt.
http://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/life/conservation.htm

I has a good opening paragraph that basically summarizes what Roosevelt did as far as conservation.

"One of President Theodore Roosevelt's most lasting and significant contributions to the world was the permanent preservation of the some of the most unique natural resources of the United States. According to the National Geographic, the area of the United States placed under public protection by Theodore Roosevelt, as National Parks, National Forests, game and bird preserves, and other federal reservations, comes to a total of approximately 230,000,000 acres or about 84,000 acres per day!"

Teddy was said to have a interest in natural history, this made him more environmentally conscious. Roosevelt is remembered today as one of the first presidents to help conserve our wildlife.

Friday, April 4, 2008

City of Factories

I found a great little video clip from a PBS documentary. It's called "MAQUILÁPOLIS [City of Factories] Take a look.........

http://http//youtube.com/watch?v=tRdu5qo-htU&feature=related

A Typical Day for a Mexican Sweatshop Worker


I found a great source discussing the topic of Mexican sweatshops. Its called “Sweatshops In Mexico”
Labor is a lot cheaper in Mexico than in the Unites States, so it is cheap and convenient for American companies to have their products made in Mexico. Not surprisingly, a lot of the factories that made these products were built near the US/Mexican border. These factories are known as "maquila" or "maquiladora".
This is what a typical day might have in store for a sweatshop worker.

Pay and working conditions can be terrible. This is what two women told human rights workers about the maquila where they work in Tehuacan, south-east of Mexico City:
Each shift is from 8.30 am until 8.30 pm, but if workers do not complete the number of clothes they have been told to make that day, they must work longer without any pay;
On Saturdays, people must work from 8 am until 5 pm without a lunch break;
Workers are paid between $30 and $50 per week;
Girls as young as 12 and 13 work in the factory;
When workers leave the factory (to go to lunch or to go home) they are searched to make sure they haven't stolen anything;
When women are hired, they are tested to see if they are pregnant. If they are pregnant, they are fired.
If you arrive 15 minutes late, you must work for 3 days without pay.
When one man was sick for a day, he lost a whole week's pay.
When maquila workers organized an independent trade union about 10 years ago, one of its leaders was assassinated. And on one occasion when some human rights workers visited a maquila, armed guards put guns to their heads. The maquila workers were terrified that their bosses might find out who had been talking. So life as a Mexican sweatshop over is got a great life at all. I am very grateful for being born in the greatest country in the world.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Invention In Late 19th Century


A late 19th century invention that greatly effects my everyday life would be the telephone. The telephone, invented by Alexander Graham Bell (March 3, 1847, Edinburgh, Scotland - August 2, 1922, Baddek, Nova Scotia) invented the telephone (with Thomas Watson) in 1876. Bell also improved Thomas Edison's phonograph. Bell invented the multiple telegraph (1875), the hydroairplane, the photo-sensitive selenium cell (the photophone, a wireless phone, developed with Sumner Tainter), and new techniques for teaching the deaf to speak. Obviously Bell has improved life for the rest of us. Without a telephone, (or should I say cell phone), I wouldn't be able to carry out my daily routine. In today's society, communication is an important factor in almost every Americans life. The constant need for communication is growing, and Bell started it all.