Wednesday, October 31, 2007

The Signs of Hong Kong

Hung Hom Graffiti

I rather enjoy looking at signs in whatever non-English speaking country I am in. Whether it's the loosely translated English or the artful display of Kanji or a combination of both, it's always fun to look at. Click here for a few more. A few from here in Hong Kong, a few other countries and even the states.

One of my favorites from Cambodia:
No gun or boom

Friday, October 26, 2007

Full of Redoubt

Hong Kong's history as a British colony has ensured it has an interesting personality with some excellent areas to explore especially for someone interested in World War 2 history such as yours truly. Throughout various high mountain areas of Hong Kong, one can find these ruins, know as Redoubts in various states of disrepair and neglect. Some of the more well known ones include the Shing Mun Redoubt on the Gin Drinker's Line, the Pinewood Battery and Devil's Peak Redoubt.

Devil's Peak Redoubt

I recently explored the last of these three, way up on Devil's Peak. The area is quite accessible, only about a 25 minute walk from the Yau Tong train stop. Hardly any of the sprawling compound is closed or sealed off. Provided you have a decent flashlight and don't mind getting dirty and meeting some friendly subterranean reptiles, you too can crawl through foxholes once occupied by the British, Indian Rajputs and Japanese troops. What I really like about these areas is that they are not meant to be tourist attractions, just areas that seem to have been forgotten.

Click here to browse all the photos I took in, around and under the fortress.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Looking Out My Windows

The apartment building I live in is relatively new in Hong Kong, so it tends to be pretty nice. One of its nicest features are the large windows. It also helps I live on the 21st floor. Every morning I wake up, open my bedroom door and see this:
From Hung Hom to North Point

Then I turn to my left and check out the progress being made on a new set of buildings. As the workers work towards completion, I often sit and watch them straddling the Bamboo scaffolds as the peel away all the layers.

Peeling the Bamboo

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Evening on the Praya

After a nice run in Central, HK tonight, I headed back home while the Symphony of Lights was taking place. A tourist infection no doubt. I'm allowed say that since I am a resident of this place. Here is the Avenue of Stars:
Avenue of Stars

Here are a few more that I took this fine evening.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

An Argument for Guns?

For as long as I have been alive, I have been anti-gun across the board. The level of violence in the states is almost unparalleled in the world thanks to the lax laws regarding who is allowed to own or buy a gun. The law cannot touch many gun owners, who go about acquiring arms illegally.

A daily routine of mine is to log on to the St. Louis Post Dispatch's web site, STL Today.com, and peruse the headlines. Almost without exception, there is a story of someone gunned down, a bullet riddled body found or some other terrible gun crime. It's never made much sense to allow this to go on.

Then comes this recent quote from a man in Burma:

"I really want change - but they have guns and we don't, so they'll always win."

--from this article on BBC

I've followed the violence in Burma quite closely over the past few weeks. The once promising peaceful protests of monks and civilians has spiraled into sickening violence on the part of the military and thugs. Among the sad, sad stories that are struggling to make their way past the iron media curtain imposed by the government: protesters mercilessly gunned down in the street; cars pulled over and occupants beaten and incarcerated; praying monks beaten and incarcerated; monasteries being raided and trashed with monks being sent to rural prison camps; civilians' homes invaded at 3am and occupants dragged out and incarcerated; international media being intimidated and physically denied from filing reports; people coming home from work struggling to breathe amidst the tear gas used by the military; sons and daughters abducted by the military unable to be located by parents; the internet being completely shut down in the country to prevent news of the terror being imposed reaching the outside world.

I cannot help but think: what if this country allowed its citizens to own guns? Would these travesties still be happening? Would the violence that would occur as people fought back result in thousands of deaths? Is this the reason our founding fathers in the US ensured citizens should always be allowed to own guns? Is violence the only answer in this situation? Does gun ownership in a country cause more violence or does it protect its citizens from brutal regimes abusing and enslaving the population? Is the NRA on to something???

We may never know.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Burma vs Myanmar

While what the country should be referred to as is up for discussion, violence has begun there.

Apparently the government has shut down the internet and most phone communication coming out of the country within the last 24 hours. It is scary to think what they have in store that they do not want the rest of the world to see. Just tonight, one of the local news channels here in Hong Kong showed footage from yesterday of the miltary attacking protesters and bystanders. The video shows a man getting shot at point blank range as he fled the rushing troops. Apparently this man was a Japanese reporter, Kenji Nagai, a veteran reporter of many war zones and conflict areas. He's not alone. The latest reports speculate many casualties, including monks.

While the government attempts to block any news of what is happening inside the country, it is more diffilcult to do than in 1988, when 3,000 were killed with very little news of the violence reaching the outside world. The world has changed. The same technology that allows me to ramble on here also plays host to this blog belonging to Ko Htike, a gentleman from (Burma) currently in London (as reported on...drumroll...CNN.com). He is using his sources in the country to get photos, accounts and news to the outside world. If you take one minute to just look at this site to see what the Burmese government so badly wants to hide, then this guy is making a difference.

Unfortunatley, it looks like things are going to get a lot worse before they get better.

***UPDATE: Found another web site that is posting some recent photos. I must warn that this link and the above contain some very graphic photos. Use your discretion.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

City Viewing in Asia

Comparing Hong Kong and Singapore, I find that Singapore has remained truer to its roots architecturally than has Hong Kong. I think a lot more older building have been preserved here while Hong Kong has scrapped the old for new skyscrapers. The historic buildings are there in Hong Kong for sure, but they are fewer and further between.

Near Chinatown

Here are a few more from a couple nights walking the city.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Singapore Commerce

Currently in Singapore. My hotel overlooks the burgeoning port and endless container docks. I feel like I am watching Modern Marvels on the Discovery Channel.
From satellite image on Google:

View Larger Map

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Monks on the March

The drama continues in Myanmar. I am fascinated by it all. The protests in pictures.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Myanmar: A New Day Coming?

The past few days, I've been following an intriguing set of events taking place in Myanmar. While CNN dot com is filled with Britney, OJ and other nonsense, the BBC has done a great job with coverage. Even better local coverage here.

In a nutshell: Recently, there have been some incidents where the ruling military dictatorship has incarcerated and held some local Buddhist monks. In addition, the monks are protesting a government policy that doubled gas prices overnight without warning (And we thought we had it rough in the US). While the government has been incarcerating and abusing its civilian citizens for years, it has always respected the monks in this extremely devout Buddhist nation. So in response, the Buddhist monks have gathered and marched peacefully the past six days. Each day, the numbers of protesting monks grows and fortunatley so far, there has been no violence.

Past tactics the government has used to combat civilian protests is to hire goon squads to intimidate and even violently break up any kind of protests inlcuding holding protesters indefinitely. The amazing thing that is happening now is that these are not civilian protests. The throngs of monks that have been forming these demonstrations have even, until recently, discouraged ordinary citizens from joining them to avoid the certain violence that would come with it.

Another development is the monks were allowed to march to the house of detained democracy activist and leader Aung San Suu Kyi. She even came out and showed her support for the monks.

Normally something like this is so far from my consciousness that the story remains a headline on a web site. However, this is different. When I was in Myanmar, I visited the Shwedagon Pagoda, which is the focal point for many of the protests. At the Pagoda, I met a monk and talked at length with him. He invited me to speak at the school where he was based. After that, we spent the afternoon together, him asking me about Western culture, discussing religion and life. When I caught my flight later that day, he gave me a blessing. I imagine he is joining in these protests and I wish for his safety along with a positive outcome for the people of Myanmar.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Asashoryu on the Skids

Sumo is in trouble. That is, according to the BBC.

During my three years in Japan, I got into Sumo a bit. There is not really a Sumo season, as the two week tournaments are held during the odd months of the year. Soon after I first arrived in Japan in 2002, a young Mongolian was just establishing himself as a Yokozuna, the highest ranking in the sport. For the next three years, I followed each Sumo Basho on tv when I could and even attended a match in Fukuoka.

It was the final day of the 2003 November Tournament and Joey and I road tripped for the afternoon and got two scalped tickets outside the taikan. We watched all the matches leading up to the final match which pitted the heavily favored Asashoryu against Tochiazuma. Both were 12-2 leading up the final match of the 15 day tournament, the winner taking the title. It was a fairly short match as Tochiazuma overpowered Asashoryu and pushed him out for the upset championship. Joey and I stood up in our cramped booth as we joined the crowd in showering the champion with the seat cushions we had been sitting on. It was an amazing thrill, perhaps the Japanese equivalent of being almost courtside at the NBA championship.

The thing about Sumo is that it is not very popular at all with the Japanese population under 50. There is so much tradition with the sport that it seems like the youth don't have time for it. Plus the mainstream international sports are becoming ever more popular. (One exception is some rural high schools in Kyushu. I had several friends who worked at schools where the Sumo program was healthy and churned out some fine young talent.)

And now the trouble with one of the all time greatest Sumo wrestlers, Asahsoryu, the aforementioned young Mongolian. As he has racked up Sumo titles the past five years, there have been several instances where he has broken certain rules or traditions and has upset the omnipotent Japan Sumo Assiciation. The final straw was when he recently participated in a charity soccer game back in Mongolia while he had withdrawn from a previous tournament due to injury. His punishment from the JSA was a two tournament ban. Unfortunately, unable to do what he loves, Asashoryu battled depression and was recommended by his doctors to return to Mongolia for recuperation.

So Sumo's best Yokozuna is now in Mongolia and scandal is rife in the Sumo world. What will happen next? Will another young Mongolian, Hakuho, step up and become the dominant figure in the sport? Will Asashoryu triumphantly return to regain his position on top? Will Japan ever warmly accept a foreigner as its dominant poster boy? Will Sumo survive or will it have to abandon its traditions and deep rooted history in order to remain competetive with other sports? It should be interesting to watch.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Hong Kong - Getting Around the City

With five weeks under my belt in Hong Kong, I have had a chance to get out on the weekends and check out some pretty nice areas. Weekdays are spent in Macao in the daily grind of work, and I have not had a day off since arrival. So Saturdays and Sundays are more valuable than ever and I try to make the most of them. Another change of lifestyle coming from STL is that my weekend nights are not spend out on the town, so I usually manage to rise at a reasonable hour. Here is how my weekends usually break down:

Saturday AM, get up and do any errands that need to get done: recharge my phone credit, laundry, get any necessities, toiletries, food, etc., pick out an interesting place on the map whether it is on HK Island or in the New Territories, go to that place, walk a lot, explore, wear myself out then get back early evening to cook some food and have a relaxing evening at home. Sunday AM, work on my timesheet, expense reports, various work odds and ends. Maybe have a nap, or call back to the US. The Wanchai Hash on Sunday starts at 4pm sharp, so I leave myself plenty of time to find buses, trains, ferries, or any method of transport that I need to get there.

The list of places I have explored already is a short one, but quite varied in what each place has to offer. The photos I have posted so far include some of these places, but I'd like to point out an amazingly valuable and underrated tool I use to get a feel for where I'm going: Google Maps.

As an exercise, if you are a person with ample free time, or one that has access to the internet at work and lots of time to (ab)use it, plug in any of these places in the above web site, click on Hybrid, then zoom to the smallest level of detail possible. Crazy, that technology is. These are places I have checked out so far, whether on my own or with a well-planned Hash run or with the hiking group TWATS (Trail Walkers Are Tired Soles) Hong Kong.

Aberdeen
Chai Wan/Big Wave Bay
Kennedy Town
Mui Wo/Chueng Sha/Lantau Island
Plover Cove Country Park
Pok Fu Lam
Sai King
Yuen Long

One week more in Macao, then off to Singapore.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Pro on Flickr

I just dropped a bit of cash to go Pro on flickr.com. Why? The main reason is that every photo you have ever uploaded there is saved, however if you are not pro, only 200 of your most recent photos are available. The minute you drop some cash, all of them come back. I now have 480 photos online. Just had the chance to revisit a few. A fellow hasher recently told me there is a cheap flight from Macao to Yangon, Myanmar. Considering I took this set in Myanmar, I am quite tempted to get back. What an amazing country. I was last there in Autumn, 2005.
Boat Race Gallery

I've also always enjoyed flickr's layout and way of browsing. Here is a page that lists all of my photo tags in quite an interesting way.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Aerial Venetian

After work, I climbed a nearby hill and got a bird's eye view of the Venetian complex and nearby constuction sites. The road at left is the Cotai Strip, along which most of the casinos will be/are being built. Just to the left of the road is The City of Dreams construction site along with another Sands resort.
The Beast at Dusk