Belize on 5-K and a pack of smokes
There are superficial people everywhere, but a whole section of the
human soul is simply missing in Americans. Most foreigners can never
understand it unless they have lived inside America's total dominance
of the material slave-state -- Fritz Lang's Metropolis.
-- Gui Rochat
By Joe Bageant
Once one becomes aware of that babies die in the third world as an
indirect result of our simplest choices such as buying Ziploc plastic
bags or bottled water or driving a car, life changes for any
approximately moral American. Restlessness sets in, a nagging guilt
that only swells with time until finally night thoughts grow so damned
anxious that something has to be done. It's been that way with me
for a long time. About a year ago I decided to do something more about
it than pat myself on the back for recycling the mountain of bottles
and unread magazines our household seems to generate. So last fall I
vowed to find a decent third world family and put up the money to do
something together to better their lives and my own. The issue was so
unbearable by spring this year that, by god, I was determined to get it
done.
(Following this essay, there's a link to an album of photos taken by my good friend Arvin Hill.)