Feel Good Friday: Hero Coach Halt School Shooting

Feel Good Friday: Hero Coach Halt School Shooting

Several weeks ago, CBS’s 60 Minutes told the amazing story of Frank Hall, an assistant football coach at Chardon High School.  When a a shooter entered the high school and started spraying gunfire into a crowd of students, Hall confronted the shooter and chased him out of the building. 

Here is how the story began: 

Two years ago this week three students were killed and three were wounded in a high school shooting you probably don’t remember because there are so many. An assistant football coach named Frank Hall helped stop that shooting. But when we sat down with him recently, Hall told us he wished there was no reason to know his name or, God forbid, think of him as a hero. He’s the type you’d call a “regular guy.”

On February 27th, 2012, Hall was doing what he always did. With hugs and fist bumps, he kept order among a hundred kids gathering in the school cafeteria before class. Then, Hall was confronted by a question no one can truly answer. What would you do at the sound of gunfire? No time to think. There’s only the reflex of character. This is the story of a fraction of a second and the months of consequences that follow. . . .

The Human Impacts of Climate Change

I just recently finished reading Elizabeth Kolbert’s book, Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change. Kolbert focuses the first half of the book on exploring the places, people, and creatures that climate change has already begun to affect, and the second half on the policy debates under the Bush administration, as well as the state of scientific research at the time. Originally published in 2006, the book is now eight years old, making it somewhat outdated. However, its age also makes Kolbert’s narrative about people suffering the consequences of a warming Earth even more intimidating. She writes about the receding and disappearing glaciers that we often hear about, but she also delves into the issue of permafrost thawing in Alaska and other northern areas, the migration of butterfly species northward in England as temperatures rise, and the risks to coastal communities of sea level rise. When Kolbert traveled to Alaska to research the book and meet with one of the leading experts on permafrost, she found homes and other structures that were beginning to collapse due to the thawing of the ground below. It can be easy living in a temperate climate to forget about the human impacts of climate change that are already being felt. It seems like here in the Northeast, climate change only becomes a part of our public discourse after a major storm event.

After finishing the book (which I highly recommend), I did a little research to see what the current state of climate change policy is under the Obama administration. A look at the administration’s climate change page shows that the administration has made a greater effort recently to work with the international community in reducing emissions of greenhouse gases. However, it seems that most of the agreements and coalitions call for a general reduction in greenhouse gas emissions without hard numerical goals to meet. While the Obama administration has made an effort to begin the process of reducing carbon dioxide emissions here in the US through the limits set on coal plant emissions built in the future, it seems like too little, too late. As Kolbert explains, climate change is happening and it is affecting people now. Emissions globally continue to increase and the current level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is around 400 ppm (according to NOAA). Besides the other reasons of energy security, national security, and the environment, investing in sustainable and renewable energy sources and reducing our individual energy use are crucial for getting emissions under control, and even then there is no guarantee that we won’t feel the effects of climate change. The people in Alaska are clearly feeling it already and relatively small levels of sea level rise will be enough to inundate many coastal communities, besides the recent extreme and sporadic weather patterns that have been attributed to climate change in the media (though not in any scientific publication that I know of). Climate change and its policy are complicated issues, and I plan to delve into them further in my next few posts.

“Women Are Not Men”

Women Are Not Men

That was the title of a recent rebroadcast of the Freakonomics podcast, which asks what do Wikipedia edits and murder have in common? Answer: women statistically do them far less frequently than men.  The podcast also explores why women tend to be less competitive than men, why they make less and why they have become less happy.

Here is a description of the episode from the Freakonomics website:

We take a look at the ways in which the gender gap is closing, and the ways in which it’s not. You’ll hear about the gender gap among editors of the world’s biggest encyclopedia, and what a study conducted in Tanzania and India has to say about female-male differences in competition. You’ll also hear about the female happiness paradox and one of the biggest gender gaps out there: crime. Which begs the question: if you’re rooting for women and men to become completely equal, should you root for women to commit more crimes?

“Women Are Not Men”

Women Are Not Men

That was the title of a recent rebroadcast of the Freakonomics podcast, which asks what do Wikipedia edits and murder have in common? Answer: women statistically do them far less frequently than men.  The podcast also explores why women tend to be less competitive than men, why they make less and why they have become less happy.

Here is a description of the episode from the Freakonomics website:

We take a look at the ways in which the gender gap is closing, and the ways in which it’s not. You’ll hear about the gender gap among editors of the world’s biggest encyclopedia, and what a study conducted in Tanzania and India has to say about female-male differences in competition. You’ll also hear about the female happiness paradox and one of the biggest gender gaps out there: crime. Which begs the question: if you’re rooting for women and men to become completely equal, should you root for women to commit more crimes?

Inside the Boston Bombing Investigation

Inside the Boston Bombing Investigation

Yesterday, linked to a This American Life story about an Orlando FBI shooting loosely linked to the Boston Marathon Bombing.  Today, we take you inside the investigation of the investigation of the Boston Bombing.

60 Minutes went “the inside story of the Boston Marathon bombing manhunt.” Here is how the story began:

The two explosions that tore through the Boston Marathon nearly a year ago were like a starting gun on a second race against time. Unknown terrorists were on the loose and they had more bombs. Now, for the first time, you’re going to hear the inside story from the federal investigators who ran the manhunt. They led a taskforce of more than 1,000 federal agents, state police and Boston cops.

Tonight, they will speak of the disturbing evidence that cracked the case and of a debate among the investigators that ultimately led to the dragnet’s violent end. The afternoon of April 15th, the FBI’s man in charge of Boston got a text, “two large explosions near the finish line.” For Special Agent Rick DesLauriers, the marathon became a sprint to catch the killers before they struck again. . . .