Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Love, Power and Unity! - I Love Windy City!

Windy City - Love Supreme (MV PV)

I'll be writing updates about basketball and reggae on Independence Day, and a day in the life of "Intensives" soon, in the mean time I wanted to share a video of my favorite Korean band. Their live performance is an irie affair full of reggae and funk. This video doesn't do them full justice in capturing their creativity, conscious lyrics or beautiful energy. As soon as I find one of their reggae videos, you'll see it here. I love Windy City!

Friday, August 04, 2006

The USA Wins the Mini World Cup!!! (7.30.06)


Team USA - 2006 Seoul Mini World Cup Champions! Posted by Picasa

With an election stealing, military service dodging, warmongering president who is responsible for turning our country’s largest surplus into its biggest deficit, while eliminating health care for the poor and causing unemployment rates to skyrocket to the highest rates ever, AND causing the unnecessary deaths of 100’s of thousands of US Americans, Iraqis and Afghanis through unjust wars, I am not your typical flag-waving US American.

Yes, it seems that the US government values profit and money more than human life. Nonetheless, I love my country for the lofty ideals on which it was founded and the potential it has to become a true democracy. The fact that the founding fathers wrote “All men are created equal,” while owning slaves illustrates that they were hypocrites. Still, the possibility exists for US citizens to make US government more responsible. I have chosen to live outside of the country while it is being run by a fraudulent president whose corporate-run militaristic government is bent on empire expansion. I don’t want to contribute to an economy which values war profiteering more than global human welfare. I’ll go back when I no longer have to shake my head in disapproval at the mention of the US president… Nope, I’m not usually the proud US American.

But I was a proud US American Sunday night! Team USA emerged as the champions of the Mini World Cup held here in Korea!

There are tons of soccer playing expats from all over the world who play soccer in the Super Sunday Football League here in Seoul. Most of the 15 teams in the league are made up of players from various countries. Last Sunday we left our league teams to play for national pride. There were 10 teams vying for the trophy: 2 teams from Korea, 1 from Malaysia, 1 representing Mongolia, 1 from the Ivory Coast, a Latino team (mostly Central and South Americans), a Common Wealth team (mostly Canadians and Brits), a French team, a USA team, and a “The Rest of the World” team. In the end, it was the rag-tag team of scrappy US players who outplayed teams who had uniforms made for the occasion.

My Korean expat team, Lokomotiv Goyang Football Club was well represented on the US side, which was the only team to finish the tournament undefeated! Sean Nix, of Loko, scored 2 goals in the USA's drive toward the final. And the defense, anchored by Loko's MVP defender, yours truly playing sweeper, held opposing teams to 2 goals in 6 games.

The Mini World Cup was a 1-day tournament which took place from 9:30am to 9:30pm on the training pitches near Suwon World Cup Stadium on a very hot and humid day (90 degrees, 80% humidity?). We won hard fought games over Malaysia, France and the Latin Lovers, and tied one of the Korea teams in the first round. But I was truly most proud of the squad as we overcame dehydration and cramps to defeat the Common Wealth and France in the semi-final and final, respectively.

In a time during which it is easy to “hate” the US it was cool to hear spectators chanting “U-S-A!” during the championship game. They weren’t US citizens cheering for us. They were players who had participated in the tournament, and were applauding our grit and determination.

People can talk all the smack they want about the US not being a soccer power, but the international soccer heads in South Korea have to give props to the US expats who are the undisputed champions of the July 30, 2006 Mini World Cup in Seoul!

Other highlights of the tournament included 1.) a spectacular play which ended with Aisha, 1 of 2 women in the tournament, scoring a header for the Common Wealth from a chipped heel pass inside the box, and 2.) hearing the crowd boo and jeer a player for diving inside the box.

Don’t Believe The Hype!



I wonder why more people know about Mel Gibson’s drunken tirade than these statistics?

FYI, as of July 28th, this is a brief score card to keep in mind the next time the media tries to make you believe that “Israel’s response has been measured”. Keep in mind that these statistics were compiled before Israel bombed a shelter, killing 37 children and 12 women.

The Mounting Toll:
* Number of Lebanese people killed in the two-week conflict: 422, of whom 375 were civilians.
* A further 27 Hezbollah guerrillas have been killed and 20 Lebanese soldiers.
* Number of Israeli dead since the conflict began: 42, of whom 18 were civilians and 24 soldiers.
* Number of Palestinians killed by Israel in the Gaza Strip since the capture of Corporal Gilad Shalit: 121.
* Number of Israeli air strikes on Lebanon yesterday: 100.
* Hezbollah rockets fired yesterday: 80.
* The Israel Defence Force claimed yesterday to have hit 10 Hezbollah buildings.
* That adds up to an estimated $1 billion in damage to infrastructure.
* Number of Lebanese bridges destroyed: 105
* Number of Israeli bridges destroyed: 0.
* Number of Lebanese ports bombed: 3.
* Estimate of the number of Lebanese people displaced in the fighting: 750,000.
* Lebanon has 2,000 UN troops who have been in the south since 1978.
* The value of arms exported to Israel from the UK in the past 18 months: £25m.
* United States “aid” to Israel: $5 billion a year?
* The number of Britons evacuated from Lebanon by yesterday evening: 2,526.
* Israel’s military spending: $9.45billion (in 1995); Lebanon: $540

Stats courtesy of playahata.com via Rob Ellington