Malagasy Adventures

Entries categorized as ‘News’

A failing lemonade stand

20 November, 2008 · 3 Comments

A hypothetical:

Let’s just say, that when I get home, I open up a neighborhood lemonade stand.  Hmm…northern hemisphere…how about a hot chocolate stand?  I will make my hot chocolate with inexpensive Sam’s club cocoa powder, sweetened condensed milk, and hot water.  I will sell it for $1.50 per cheap styrofoam cup.  For the sake of argument, let’s say that I’m selling it on a street with a lot of foot traffic, and this little business really takes off.  Feeling quite secure, I leave the hot chocolate receipe as is, and begin using the profit to buy expensive shoes, go to concerts, and finally buy a $30,000 car.  (I guess I’ve sold a lot of HC)  Now, once all of these people walking around in the cold get used to the idea of buying hot chocolate, suddenly another hot chocolate stand appears across the street.  Jill the barista makes her hot chocolate with 2% milk, sugar, and fair-trade Madagascar cacao, and serves it in a recycled, biodegradable paper cup, also offering a $.25 reduction for those who bring their own mug.  Her beverage sells for $2.  I’m not worried – the walkers of Portage, MI are already comfortable with my product – they will stick with what they know.  Also, it’s cheaper.  Jill will be out of business in 2 weeks for selling her élitist, expensive drink.  After a couple of weeks, less people are buying my hot chocolate, and I see them lined up on the other side of the street.  ”This cannot be”, I think to myself.  A once regular customer stops by one day to say hello.  I ask him why he has switched to this foreigner across the street, and he tells me, “Well, Callista.  Jill’s product is just better.  It tastes better and is made of higher quality ingredients.  Even her cups can be thrown into a compost bin and used to fertilize my garden in the spring.  It’s a better product with a smaller environmental impact.  Sure, it’s a little more expensive, but it’s worth it.  I’m sorry.”

“Hmph, I think.”  Phooey on these élitist, disloyal hippies.  I will continue to invest in my inferior product, and wait for everyone to come back around.  Problem is, nobody comes back around.  I begin missing car payments, and toss my credit card bills in the shredder.  Finally in a dire situation, rather than sell my car, or try to adapt my business to consumer demand, I go to my parents and ask for $40,000.  They laugh in my face.  Jill has prevailed.

I’m sorry Detroit.  I know I’m from MI, and that many people I know have family members who have at some point been employed by the Big Three.  The Big Three has probably put many of my friends through college in some way.  But.  The automobiles coming out of Detroit have been seen as the inferior products they are for quite some time now.  Given alternatives that are better for the environment and of higher quality, the public has made their choice.  The Big Three hasn’t sufficiently adapted to customer demand.  While they have offered things like the hybrid Escape, they’ve continued pushing the Yukons and Suburbans, and haven’t offered small, high gas mileage options to anywhere near the extent that their Asian competitors have.  It seems to me that bad business decisions have been made, and I’m not quite sure how that’s the American taxpayers fault.  I’m glad this hasn’t made it to vote yet.

Categories: News

I can’t believe Colin Powell endorsed Obama!

21 October, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I’ve gotta say, things are looking better and better for Obama.  From afar, it’s sometimes hard to judge how things are really going, but when people like Colin Powell and Ken Adleman endorse Barack, it’s hard to refute – things are going well.  Even conservative republicans think that McCain has gone off the deep end, evidenced by first and foremost, his VP pick, but also his reactions to the financial crisis, as well as his combative and negative advertisements.  Hell, a while back, even Karl Rove thought McCain had gone too far in his attacks of Obama!

I just finished the book Dreams From My Father, that Obama wrote before he was in the spotlight.  I was already obviously a supporter, but after reading that book I think that not only will Obama be a good president, but that he will go down in history as one of the greats.  For any élitism that the right accuses him/the left of, Obama has had real experience with the least among us.  Rather than immediately starting law school as a (relative) youth, he worked on the South Side of Chicago in some of the worst neighborhoods you can imagine.  He also witnessed extreme poverty in Indonesia, and discovered his roots in Kenya.  If this guy isn’t real (as much as a politician can be), I don’t know who is!  

I can just taste the excitement in the air.  It’s like the end of an era.  Even though all of America’s problems won’t immediately just dissipate (the financial crisis might never be resolved it seems), if Obama is elected president, at minimum the winds will change, and possibilities of amelioration will exist.  I’m missing the excitement, and especially the humor, but talking with Gabe and Karen I get my political high horse fix.  If he wins, Karen’s having a party for all who voted for him (or wanted to, i.e.  the French people around here).  If not, she has given strict instructions for nobody to come near her for the entire day.  

Hopefully, Michigan won’t need to open the absentee ballots to see what’s inside – I’m pretty confident that the Malagasy postal system will not deliver mine in time (I sent it yesterday, as it arrived last Friday).  If it doesn’t arrive by the 3rd, I’ll do the federal online write-in, but we all know that the popular vote counts for jack.

Also, I went shopping at the used clothing market today for a Sarah Palin outfit.  I was looking for some sort of a red skirt suit, which I suppose will make me imitating Tina Fey imitating Sarah Palin, but whatever.  I found a hideous red skirt, but no blazer.  Might have to go with black.  The biggest challenge is going to be learning how to pile hair that’s never been in anything besides a ponytail on top of my head and getting it to stay there.

Categories: News

Mid-Internship Reflections

7 October, 2008 · 1 Comment

Well, I’ve been here for nearly two and a half months, and I come home in about 2 months.  I think Madagascar has gotten as used to me as I have to it.  In retrospect, I really didn’t like my first few weeks (maybe even close to a month) here that much.  I always felt lost, didn’t know how to react to people shrieking ‘vazaha’ every other minute, didn’t have a social circle, and had a hard time not focusing on negatives like the pollution spewing from vans on my walk home and missing Patrick.  I realized this morning that people don’t bother me so much anymore.  There’s still the occasional vazaha, but not so often as it used to be.  In the Old City when I come home, there are often kinds crowded around tourists to get them to buy greeting cards and take pictures, but they let me pass right though with nothing more than a ’salama’.  Last week, a guy was walking next to me on my way home, which always makes me immdiately suspicious, weary that I’ll have to ignore yet another flirting attempt.  Instead, he said, “Excuse me, do you speak English?”.  I cautiously said yes, and he walked me all the way up to the Old City so that he could practice some English.  It was probably the first time talking to someone in the street has lead to a positive experience.  

Especially after being out in rural areas, and around people who don’t really speak French, my comfort threshold is definitely higher.  I’ve also thought a lot about how wasteful and materialistic we are back home.  Now, I’ve gone on about that many times before, but it has a bit more perspective now.  Every day I have one bucket of hot water with which to bathe.  And it’s plenty.  I don’t even always use it all, even when I wash my hair.  After this bucket bath, I feel refreshed, clean, and warm.  It doesn’t take 20 minutes standing under running water to get the same feeling!  

I don’t have a refridgerator, and therefore spend a lot of evenings having egg and ‘vache qui rit’ cheese sandwiches for dinner.  Being the lover of food that I am, I do miss all of the food options back home and how easy they are.  However, on the weekends when I got out for pizza and beer, I appreciate it SO much!  It’s a special treat that I recognize not everyone around can take advantage of.

As much of a coffee snob as I am, I make coffee most mornings by putting coffee grounds and boiling water in my teapot, and then filtering it through  a cloth filter with a handle (looks a little like a tiny butterfly net).  (Granted, I asked Gabe if he would get me a French press in Tana this week if he happens to see one, as I’ve unsuccessfully scoured the shops of Fianar for one), and it works fine!  

I don’t have a single pair of fancy stilettos, nice dresses, or a TV, and it’s all fine.  The sad part of this is that when I get back home, I’d imagine I’ll fall back into my wasteful shower habits, taking food, refridgerators, and running water for granted.  I will continue to accumulate things, and probably buy yet another pair of $50 jeans.  It seems to me that unless we’re willing to go all ‘Walden’, this kind of hypocrisy is nearly unavoidable.  I do hope that my time here will in the future at least remind me how lucky we are concerning resources available to us.

Another reflection that I almost continually go back and forth on is living life abroad.  It’s different, it’s exciting, it’s a challenge, and sometimes I think I’d like to join the foreign service and get posted all around the world every 2 years or so.  However, at the same time, it’s friggin tiring!  After every field visit, I feel mentally exhausted just from having paid such close attention to things I don’t always understand all day.  Everyday things become difficult, and then there’s the feeling of missing things about home so often.  (Although, mosts posts through the govt allow people to live pretty comparably to how they would in the states, and don’t always come with the level of immersion I’m growing accustomed to)  So, I’ll go ahead and admit it.  Strong, Independant, can handle any stressful situation Callista misses Patrick, her family, routines like going to the gym, and grocery stores.  

Overall, I’m having a great experience, and even the frustrations all seem to have lessons.  I’m gaining valuable experience working in a foreign and developing environment, as well as learning a bit about USAID.  I’m spending almost no money compared to what I’d be spending in France ($2 for lunch instead of like 10).  I’ve made many friends and acquaintances, and can’t go much of anywhere in town without running into someone I know.  (There’re also a lot of people who know my name that I have no idea who they are!  Which is weird…and embarrassing when I can’t place where I know someone from)  I’ve developed more of an appreciation for many things back home, especially when I talk to people in my own age group.  Xavier, an older man who sells snacks along the Old City street, has gotten to know me fairly well.  He always says hello when I walk down on my way to work, and goodbye and have good dreams as I climb back up in the evening.  (When he asks what’s new, I also tell him of travel plans etc, and he always asks when I’ll be back.  If anything ever happens to me, at least someone will notice I’m gone!)  He saw a book in my hand when I was on my way up the other day, and asked if I had any novels in French.  I did happen to bring the 3 Musketeers with me (in French), so he was absolutely thrilled when I let him borrow it (he really likes reading it turns out.).  I think of my book collection back home, containing books I haven’t even read yet, and wish I would have brought the whole damned thing here to share with him.

This has gotten pretty rambly, so I think I’ll wrap it up.  I have to say, there’s a lot I’m looking forward to coming home to.  That said, I’m going to try to make the most of the my remaining time here.  I have the trip to Ifaty with Sophie, a few more field visits next week, a possible trip to Tana for the election, and camping in Andringitra for Thanksgiving.  That should be plenty to keep me occupied and always also looking forward to something.  That is all for now.

Wait, I lied.  I will shamelessly admit that I’m missing being in the US leading up to the election.  Now, I realize that I’m always totally sick of it by the time it actually happens, but I miss the excitement, the frustrations, the bullshit, and the comedy.  I’ve been able to see one of the Tina Fey/Sarah Palin skits, and it made my heart pine for the hilarity of SNL, the Daily Show, and the Colbert Report as they mock these silly politicians who take themselves and the whole process far too seriously.  I also miss bitching about all of it.  Perhaps my favorite part of politics is the bitching – and the solidarity felt with others who are bitching about the same thing.  Luckily, Gabe and Karen also enjoy this, so that’s a consolation.  I think definitively that I will be Sarah Palin for Halloween.  I just need some bangs (long ones so they’ll blend it), a brightly colored sportcoat, a lot of hairspray, and some lipstick.  Unfortunately, as Gabe has pointed out, my speaking accent is already on the way to sounding like her, so if I just exaggerate the Northern MidWestness of it, I should be good to go.  Karen and the girls have some sort of toy gun I can use as a prop, and I’ve been toying with the idea of either a spiked dog collar (if I can even find anything like that) and a pig nose.  We’ll see how it goes.  

Categories: Living Abroad · Malagasy Culture · News · Work

My absentee ballot had better come…

11 September, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Now, to just browse around online to see what’s going on in the political world without having to be subjected to it every minute is definately a blessing.  I was convinced that being geographically away from the election would allow me to stay interested in what’s happening longer, and to not just feel fed up with it and sick of it.  However, even trying to keep up with the news, all I seem to be reading about is lipstick!  Not much on anything seems to be said about real issues (which is nothing new, I guess).  If McCain wins this election by distracting the American public with “sexist” out of context comments by Obama, it will be a sad day.  Not the only sad day – hell, Bush didn’t even win the first time, but a sad day none the less.  I don’t believe the debates have started yet.  I believe they will soonish?  Maybe the state of the union drinking game mandating a drink for every word Bush mispronounces or every time he says “terrist”, or “axis of evil” should be replaced by a debate drinking game mandating a drink for every uttered “lipstick”, “teen pregnancy”, or “shooting game from helicoptors”.

One thing that bugs me is this:  thus far, from what I can tell, Obama has mostly taken the high road and not been too involved in petty arguments.  Some say he needs to play dirtier to keep up.   To me though, even addressing things as stupid as people being offended by the pig/lipstick thing (which McCain has said before anyway) is absolutely idocy! It dosen’t deserve anyone’s time, so why even bother to play dirty and hit back from that?  (ironic that i’m spending my time writing my thouhts about it, eh?)

I have a hard time believing what the polls are telling us – Obama falling and McCain shooting up.  (now, if I were the Republican party, I supposed I’d read the previous sentence as Callista accusing McCain of doing herion…)  I find it very hard to believe that the annoncement of a pretty, conservative, much more lacking in ‘experience’ than any of the candidates leading up to primaries running mate would really persuade so many over to the dark side.  Did you know that the only interview the Palinator (I’m picturing her dressed as a bumblebee for Halloween) has done thus far was with People magazine!?  People magazine…come on!  I barely even read that trash when I go to the salon!   I know I surround myself with like minded people, but I still just do not believe that Obama can lose a fair election.  Gabe made a good point at lunch the other day about polling.  Most polling at this point is still done by telephone.  But, how many people in my age group have land lines?  Almost all of my friends have only cell phones, and polling in general hasn’t quite figured out how to deal with that.  Therefore, many polls aren’t accurate.  Yet, they can still have a huge effect on what people think, and how people sway.  (Although, in my opinion, if you’re basing the way you vote solely on who the polls say is ahead, you should have your right to vote revoked…)

Yikes…it’s only September, I’m not even in the country, and I’m already ranting….

On a mostly unrelated note, I was looking into how to see a taping of “Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me” for the Chicago trip my mom and I are planning, and I put myself into the pool of people who could be called to play.  I would just crap myself with glee if I ever had Carl Kassel’s voice on my home answering machine… (wait, my cell phone voicemail rather – although i’d go back into the land line generation if i had to…)

Here’s the pathetic note I sent them:

Dear Producers of Wait Wait,
My name is Callista Meeusen, and I’m a 26-year old grad student in the UW Madison’s Professional French Master’s program.  I’m currently living in  Madagascar for 4 months where I’m completing my internship requirement.  One of the things I miss most about the states is listening to Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me.  I know I know, “Subscribe to the podcast”, you say.  The thing about Madagascar is…my iTunes tells me that downloading just one episode of your show will take me 47 hours – and that’s if the internet doesn’t get interrupted at some point.  So, this is my hopeless plea to be on the show, and therefore be able to at least listen to the part I’d be on.
I do not promise to get all of the questions right – I get my news from the same internet that doesn’t allow me to listen to your show.  But, I do have a cell phone that has free incoming calls (I’m afraid that I can’t afford to call you to leave the message to be on the show – but, I have a BA in vocal music, and am not a smoker.), and am willing to get up at any time of day to answer your call.
Looking forward to listening to the show when I get home even if I don’t make the cut,
Callista Meeusen

I think that I might just be odd/desperate enough for them to call me.  They look for people to come on the show that they can crack jokes about, and I have a weird name to boot!  Here’s hoping….

Categories: News

Also

10 September, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Has the Large Hadron Collider destroyed the world yet?  Find out here.   Pretty interesting stuff that makes me wish I was a character in a Dan Brown book.  The real story is here

I have to admit, that all of this ‘answering questions about the creation of the universe/big bang’ stuff brings to mind the Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Perhaps the LHC’s answer will also be ‘42′.

Categories: News