Check out this link, it's amazing the extent that a lot of photojournalist will go to get the story or the image, especially in such a hostile political environment. Is that dumb though? Is it worth the risk? I want to know your thoughts on this issue. What do you think of photographers going to the point of risking so much more than their gear for an image? Let me know with your comments.

What happens when the media gets in the middle of the police and protestors.

Why we should really listen to the intelligence that is Henry Rollins.


"The more and more we get closer to the (2004) election, the more bullshit you start to see on places like the Fox News channel which we all watch cause it is like poor man's Comedy Central. It's true! You don't watch a guy like Bill O'Reilly, you don't sit through Sean Hannity for information, you just reconfirm you're right about everything he says you're wrong about and you have to, it's like a mantra, you have to keep telling yourself it's entertainment, it's entertainment, don't take it seriously."

It's true though, who really does watch Fox News for news? I'll stick to the Associated Press, Rueters, and MSNBC.

This has been bothering me for awhile, I as a photojournalist can't express my opinion with when asked by those I photograph and they keep pushing me and pushing me and pushing me for an answer. It was painful. I live by a code of ethics, as all journalists should, I know that they unfortunately don't, but I know that I live by the National Press Photographers Associations (NPPA) Code of Ethics when it comes to going and shooting an assignment.


I was getting asked about my views on the whole health care reform, on my views of religion and God, and the fact that I am basically destined to eternal damnation, and my views how this country is no longer a republic, but either a socialist, communist, fascist, or under the control of a czar state.

I have had trouble sleeping because of all this nonsense, it keeps me up at night, even when I go to bed. It's pointless to be concerned about these people holding signs that mean the wrong thing. Reagan is the one that started the whole "czar trend" anyways with the drug czar in the 1980s. It just so happens that the trend has grown with each administration, especially with the Obama. It pains me to that hyperlink from Glenn Beck, someone that is looked up to as a candidate hopeful for the 2012 election.

After watching this I feel like I have lost all hope for humanity for a good portion of America. It's from New Left Media. Watch it, and maybe you too, will realize that Americans really do have issues...if you didn't already.

I'm waiting for my nightmares to go away and the medication I take to really kick in and put a stop to all this nonsense. It's bad enough when the president that we'll pretty much do what we can about our pollution problem over China, OVER CHINA!!! If there is a God, when will he, or she, strike me down for all the sins I have done over the years.

I'm just letting my ethics and actions speak for themselves, and everything else will eventually fall into place. Too bad we still have to listen to all the nut cases on Fox News though....

Henry Rollins had a great quote about Fox News, but I will make add that in the next post as I can't find it in my spoken word CDs. It's great though.

I don't want to say I'm apathetic, because I'm not, I'm far from it, I just have a hard time getting caught up in either side of the health care reform battle that is going on in Congress. If anything, I feel that the Keene State College student body is apathetic. There are pockets of politically minded people certainly, the Dems, Reps, and some of the clubs like Campus Ecology getting Power Vote. Power Vote was a green energy youth movement during the 2008 election to get the younger population to vote and push their legislators to pass green energy bills into law.

Amnesty International used to be here, but they are no longer because one reason or another. Some students a few years back were trying to start a Keene State lead Food Not Bombs, but all the restaurants and groceries stores either already donate their dated food to the food pantry or pour bleach on the day old bread in the dumpsters so that nobody will eat it when dumpster diving for a meal. Food Not Bombs is a movement based around serving free vegetarian food and protesting war, poverty, or any type of injustice in the world.

My point that I am trying to get to here is that there are a lot of good ideas, and a lot of things that people are doing, or trying but aren't getting the support they deserve.

There was a tea party in Keene this weekend, there wasn't a single Keene State College student that was actively participating in it. There were though students though that made the half hour drive from Franklin Pierce University. Junior Mike Barrasso went with two other FPU students because he felt this was an important event to attend. It was about preserving his rights as an American. Senior John Gordon, not pictured, openly invited anyone that knew of profound and provokative speakers to "come to FPU" because they have the facilities.

Keene State gets the same type of people on campus, and Keene State has the facilities to have these types of people to come here, but it's always more the community that is there or just empty chairs. Sometimes I just have to look in and see how many students are there for extra credit taking notes because they know their professor may ask them about the speaker during the next quiz or exam.

It's sad that the campus overall is in such a state, and that only pockets in the actual student body care. The election showed a wide variety of people coming out, but that doesn't reflect the persistent politically active students. Call it campus apathy, or just my cynicism in how motivated the campus is, but for whatever reason, in such an important time for my generation, I see those around me doing nothing as I stand waiting at a cross road...

Do I put down my camera and take the flag out of my closet, or wait for the the students to try and do something to promote political change in Washington, D.C.?

First year students have a lot to face leaving home, from making wise decisions about not abusing their new found freedom to staying healthy in their new cramped environment, such issues have never been more important than this year with the threat of the H1N1 virus on campus, including Keene State College.


The college sent letters over the summer to all incoming students about the dangers of swine flu, also referred to as H1N1. It contained information on what is H1N1, along with a list of guidelines to follow to incase it appears on campus. Also things to remember when in a new environment, especially the close quarters of dorm life.


Freshman Erika Warnick said she, “packed a ton of hand sanitizer.”


Warnick added, “my mom is a nurse, so she packed a huge bin of medical supplies. I feel pretty prepared.”


As for other freshman, that may not be the case. This is their first chance at experiencing true independence, but they still are finding themselves more dependent than ever, especially when it comes to diagnosing themselves.


Director of Health and Wellness Christine Burke said, “students are going to want to come in, but that is the last thing we want.”


The protocol that the Health and Wellness Center has set up is that anyone with influenza like illness (ILI) or symptoms should call rather than see them as not to spread germs. This helps students with conditions such as asthma, diabetes, and Chron’s Disease, as well as anyone that may have had a transplant or be pregnant since they are at a higher risk at being infected with the influenza like illness.


The Resident Assistants are doing there part too in making sure that the freshman are educated about swine flu in the dorms and the threat. They have posted in the bathrooms fliers, much like the cards that can be seen on the tables in the Zorn Dining Commons.


“The R.A.s haven’t talked about H1N1, they have only hung up the papers in the bathrooms,” said Warnick.


The R.A.s have though been given surgical masks for students to wear if needed. The purpose of the surgical masks is to catch any droplets from a sneeze or cough, but they must be changed frequently after being used more than a few times.


“The best way (to protect oneself) is sneezing into your elbow sleeve with your hand your shoulder,” said Burke.


The H1N1 virus can only survive two to three hours on a hard surface without a lot of contact, but on any warm surfaces or one that gets a lot of contact like a door knob it is easily transferable, according to Burke.


The bathrooms in some of the large dorms don’t have any antibacterial soap, just the hand sanitizer dispensers that has been seen around the college campus in various high traffic places. A promotion of keeping hands clean and killing germs across campus with the hand sanitizer dispensers is a strong push to keeping the college safe, but the bathrooms a important start, especially with the fliers warning of the dangers of the H1N1 virus.


The college has put forth all the defensive measures it can through e-mail alerts to making sure its students has the resources to be as sanitary as possible, but with the incoming freshman, they must find their delicate balance in keeping healthy against H1N1 in their new independence at Keene State.


“The best we can do is educate not panic,” said Burke.

Canon finally decides to come up with something that is slightly original, but more or less it seems to be jumping on the band wagon that Nikon has been applying to their cameras recently their pop up flashes. Canon has enough sense to put a sensor in the pop up to trigger a "slave" flash externally without having to purchase an expensive trigger. The Canon ST-E2 Trigger so far has been the only thing offered by Canon to wirelessly fire an external flash while mounted on the camera. There is always using the "master/slave" combination of two flashes as well, but if you want just the slave to fire, then this doesn't work. The Canon 580EX II Speedlite, as new and awesome as it is, won't fire just a slave flash, they both will fire. Thankfully though, with the release of the Canon 7D, there are a few ways of utilizing the pop up flash for more than just washed out fill light.

The 7D has the ability to let the photographer make a lot of different adjustments regardless of what it is they are taking a photo of, and to be able to use the camera's built in flash rather than the Canon ST-E2 trigger or a master flash. Now the money that would have gone into the trigger can go into another slave flash, or even better, another "L Series" lens. The 7D though with the ability to change different channels to control an almost infinite number of flashes makes it very versatile for setting up different shots and using it for all types of work where using extra lighting is needed off camera. Being able to fire without the annoying pop up going off at the same time is even better.

This is camera is great for photographers that want to get into off camera flash, but don't have the money to invest in another flash along with this hefty upgrade. It is a pricy camera, but it is also great camera for those that have flashes only with the "slave" mode such as the Canon 430EX II Speedlite.

Nikon's new D300S, which is the 7D's main market competitor carries over the same feature found in the Nikon D700, a 12.3 megapixel full frame digital SLR. The D300S hasn't come out yet, but it will soon, from looking at reviews and comparing features to the 7D, it looks like Canon finally has put their foot on ladder to being the best in the business.