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Showing posts with label Carreño Justin T.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carreño Justin T.. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 April 2025

'NECKAR' OF THE GODS

Hiking Through the Neckar Valley, 
Borders Are Left at the Trailhead

By Justin T. Carreño 


Justin T. Carreño is a writer who lives in Germany.

The morning mist clung stubbornly to the hills of the Neckar Valley—

the kind of damp, quiet fog that makes everything feel softer, slower. 

It was April, and spring was just beginning to stretch out its limbs in 

southern Germany. From the medieval village of Hirschhorn, with its

 quiet castle perched above the river, our hiking group set out for a 

day of fitness, fresh air, and, as it turned out, fellowship—boots 

hitting dirt with that shared rhythm only a long trail can create.

We were a colorful mix: Germans, of course, but also people from 

further afield. Chu Li, a cheerful Chinese business consultant; 

Vladimir, the group leader, a rugged Russian IT manager with a 

dry wit; Natalia, a Ukrainian whose smile never quite left her face, 

even on the steep inclines. There was Hossam from Egypt, who 

carried dates in his pack and offered them freely. Lien, a Vietnamese 

pharmacy student with a camera always half-raised. A quiet, 

thoughtful man named Sami, who had left Syria to pursue medical 

school in Heidelberg, still carried his past in his eyes. And there 

were two Indian men, unrelated by blood but quick to bond over 

a shared culture and distant home.




Then there was the Jamaican hiker. His story of moving to 

Germany for a fresh start caught me off guard. I asked why he 

chose Germany over the U.S., which is often a more common 

destination for Jamaicans. He shrugged and said the U.S. didn’t feel 

like a good place anymore. “Germany is safer,” he added, “and the 

work-life balance, the worker protections—they’re better.” He 

hadn’t realized I was American until he asked, “Where are you from?”

“The States,” I said.

Monday, 24 March 2025

OUT OF THE BLUE


A Night of High Ranks 

and Unity in Rural Germany


By JUSTIN T. CARREÑO

 

It was early March 2025, and a cool, crisp, clear, late winter evening in the rural hills

of southwest Germany. I was on a brick patio with a firepit ablaze, and the 

smell of grilled meat and smoke filled the air. The setting, high on the ridge, was

a modern, stately home overlooking the nearby town of Landstuhl and, notably,

as well, the municipality's adjacent neighbor, the Goliath-like, U.S. installation,

Ramstein Air Base (RAB), whose presence breathed life into the small village.

(Landstuhl gained notoriety for its American military hospital where injured 

troops were evacuated during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.)


 


A friend, a military linguist, invited me to a barbecue with people from work. I asked

who was hosting, and she wasn’t sure – just a colleague of hers was going, and it was

 an open invite to others they knew, and people connected to his office. I didn’t think

much of it – I’m always up for a get-together and meeting new people, so I agreed. I

 took the train, about 10 minutes from Kaiserslautern to Landstuhl, and she picked 

me up from the town bahnhof, and we drove about another 10 minutes to the event.

 

I knew something was different about this barbecue because as we approached the 

home, it wasn’t a typical apartment or standard home of people she’d work with. It 

was a large, impressive, modern, landscaped, home with an incredible panoramic 

view spanning 180 degrees, looking out over the greater Landstuhl area, Ramstein, 

and the Pfalzerwald.


Tuesday, 22 October 2024

Mendacious • Delusional • Egomaniacal • Socio-pathic • Paranoid • Dimwitted • Flatulent

And, Now. Please Welcome...
Mr. Transactional

By Justin T. Carreño
As great as it would be to have the first woman and black woman
President, we should not vote for a candidate based on their identity,
rather it should be based on who is best qualified. The following 
spells out some of the things going on with the
candidates.

If people support Trump, they are making so many negotiations --
everyone else lies and only Trump tells the truth. The reality is he's
had three wives and has cheated on every one of them, including with a
porn star he paid hush money to keep quiet about cheating with her.
His first wife had to have a gag order to have the divorce finalized,
and when she broke the gag order she said she was physically and
sexually assaulted by Trump. Additionally, he's been found twice
liable for defamation and sexual assault in civil court, and bragged
about sexually assaulting women. If a man can't be faithful to his
wife, how is supposed to be faithful to the country?

People who support Trump have to say those things aren't deal
breakers for me. In his business practices, he's filed bankruptcy
multiple times. He was found to have racist business practices back
into the 90s, so this wasn't political. He had fraudulent Trump
University, and has been convicted of multiple felony counts for
fraud. He is banned from operating charities in New York because he

Friday, 4 March 2022

ƒ ON UKRAINIAN REFUGEES ƒ

Whether Black, White, or Brown,

THEY LOOK LIKE US



By Justin T. Carreño

Anyone complaining that we don't give the same outreach and attention
to the oppressed peoples of Palestine, Vietnam, Libya, Iraq, Yemen,
Afghanistan, Kashmir, Rohingya, North Korea, etc., is not considering
culture, genetics, and politics. The issues with these peoples is
perennial oppression embedded in their non-Western cultures that can't
be mitigated by standard government levers. It has nothing to do with
racism nor xenophobia.

It's not that we don't care, it's just that they are way too far gone
to do anything about on a systemic, national level using conventional
means. Ukraine, on the other hand, is an acute attack, and is not only
a Western country, which makes it closer to other Western cultures,
including the US, it is also very close to being saved. As an EMT (which I am), you
have to triage during a mass casualty incident. Save the ones you can!

Other oppressed nations are culturally distant from the Western world,
which makes it more difficult to relate, not to mention oppression and
devastation are part of what makes them the countries they are.
Ukraine is us and we are Ukraine -- they look like Americans, they act
like Americans, they dress like Americans, and they embody the same
Western ideals.

These other people are in a totally different situation. It doesn’t
mean we don’t care. It just means it's not relatable.

Friday, 20 August 2021

MOUNTAIN HIGH








The Author


By Justin T. Carreño
Spent a few days exploring Zugspitze in the Bavarian Alps -- the highest point in Germany, straddling the border, so, once on the summit, we crossed into, and descended into Tyrol, Austria. 

One of the most beautiful climbs I've done, including the approach through the Höllentalklamm (Hell's Valley Gorge). We decided to take the more technical, Höllental route, which uses via ferrata (Italian for "by iron") or the German, klettersteig, which are fixed cables you clip into, used as protection on highest angle sections. 

We were the only Americans on the mountain, so it was great to learn German climbing terms, although "Stein!" is not one you want to learn on fly...

The PJ depends on reader support. Please help us by contributing financially or by contributing editorial content via PhiladelphiaJunto@ymail.com. Empowered by WritersClearinghouse | S.P.Q.R. 1976 Richard Carreño, Editor Copyright MMXXI. All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, 20 March 2021

MY SUMMER

Broken Bonds, Temporary Life
By Justin T. Carreño

It was 1998 and the second summer I was working for the University of Connecticut Environmental Research Institute (UConn ERI) as a student employee. ERI, established in 1987 and located on UConn's Mansfield Depot campus, not far from the main campus, was a center of basic and applied environmental sciences and engineering within the university. It conducted research in the environmental sciences and engineering for state and federal agencies, industry, and educational institutions.

 

ERI was located in the Langley School Building on the western edge of Mansfield, a town two miles from the main UConn campus. It is the site of the former Mansfield Training School and Hospital for the mentally handicapped, opening in 1860 as the Connecticut School for Imbeciles. It was closed in 1993, at which time the property was transferred to the University without appropriate resources to improve deteriorating building and site conditions.

Sunday, 21 February 2021

BREAKING RACIAL BARRIERS

Hall's Hill VFD

African-Americans

 and Firefighting

 in Arlington, Virginia

 

By Justin T. Carreño
15 February 2021

 

To understand the story of African-Americans and firefighting in Arlington, it’s important to first know the history of African-Americans in the County during the Reconstruction and Industrial eras. It begins as far as back as May 1862. This was eight months before President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on 1 January 1863, when slaves in the District of Columbia were freed by an act of Congress. Fugitive slaves fleeing from the South soon flooded into Washington, DC, many of them moving into camps set up by the federal government. When smallpox swept through the overcrowded sites, however, Lt. Col. Elias M. Greene proposed that some of the freed men could farm nearby land, and recommended the “pure country air” south of the Potomac in Arlington County (then Alexandria County). With this recommendation, the government established Freedman’s Village (some say by an act of payback) on a tract of land seized by the Union on the estate of General Robert E. Lee’s Arlington House, where today Arlington National Cemetery is located.

 

The government promotion of Freedman’s Village caught the eye of real estate developers, and through the 1890s began touting land in what is now Arlington County, luring Washington residents with promises of “quiet and repose from the stir and bustle and noise” of the city. Amid mounting public pressure, in 1900, Congress offered the people of Freedman’s Village $75,000 (approximately $2.5 million in 2021). This financial settlement was divided among the residents, and the village was torn down. In the early 1900s, Arlington was approximately 38  percent Black compared to today's Black population of  8.5 percent. When the government disbanded the village, many of these 38 percent of residents formed Arlington’s four historically African-American neighborhoods, including Green Valley (also known as Nauck), Johnson’s Hill (now Arlington View), and Butler Holmes (now Penrose) in the areas around Columbia Pike, and High View Park-Hall’s Hill.