iran

Without a paddle

One of the podcasts I listen to is The Journal, from the Wall Street Journal. Today: Trapped in the Strait of Hormuz, regarding the 20,000 sailors stuck, for months, unable to pass through the strait.

Frustrating and deeply boring is just the beginning. Often without cell service, most of them rely on journalists for news of what’s actually going on with their situation. Some are facing a shortage of food and basic supplies. And worse, smaller carriers are starting to go bankrupt, abandoning the ships entirely—and the people on them.

The most haunting line is at the end:

We were talking to officials about, like, do you consider these people hostages, right? Because in some ways, they are stuck in the Persian Gulf. Iran is not letting them go home. Aren’t they kind of like hostages in a way?

And the way one [government official] pushed back was to say, no, hostages are valuable. Governments want to get hostages back.

Horrifying.

Nobody is really putting a priority on these people. We talk a lot about the oil. Like when is the oil going to start flowing through the Strait again, so that we can go back to paying lower gas prices?

…the people who make our modern way of life possible, these seafarers who bring us our oil and our goods, they are forgotten…they’re not even as important as the oil or whatever other commodity we’re hoping to get out of the Strait of Hormuz.

Desert Bunds

Any video that’s about somebody seeing something weird on Google Maps and digging into it fascinates me. Christophe Haubursin’s show Tunnel Vision investigates the purpose behind some odd patterns in the Iranian desert.

Something about the style of the video felt strangely familiar to me, so I looked over the other videos Haubursin—a senior producer for #Vox’s video team—created for Vox. Sure enough, he did What’s inside this crater in Madagascar?, which is also highly worth watching.

I think the satellite and street-view imagery provided by Google Maps is one of the most under-appreciated resources on the internet. Similar to #Wikipedia, most of us probably use it primarily when we need to look up something specific, but you really could—and I do—spend hours just browsing it. It’s a view of the world—the entire planet!—that even just forty years ago would have seemed near-godlike in scope and power.