In a case of someone buying the wrong mailing list and contacting me, last Friday, I received an ad piece from “Quintess – The Leading Residences of the World.” This is a Time Share with a difference - a big difference from any I have ever seen before. When I was in seminary, Vicki and the boys and I went to hear a sales pitch in French Lick, Indiana. It was a standard package; two weeks in beautiful downtown French Lick in a hotel yet to be built with a bowling alley in it.
This company has properties in such places as London, Florence, Paris, Jackson Hole, Napa Valley, Los Cabos, and Maui. It claims that its properties are worth more than $4 million each. Further, the company provides 5-star service at each property.
Vicki and I popped the DVD that had been sent in and marveled. The screen was filled with images of white sandy beaches, massive and luxurious buildings, top flight chefs, expensive wine, and luxurious beds. In addition, this company has made arrangements with other companies near its properties so that the guests, for instance, could be given the keys to a top-end sports car to take a spin.
The DVD, of course, does not give any cost for such opulence. So, I went to the website. There were several “packages” available. The cheapest one required a $240,000 membership deposit - that is upfront, though it is refundable in the first year if you don't like it - with an annual fee of $18,750 - that is every year - to have 20 nights available at these fabulous places. For the top package, somebody would have to pay a membership fee of $850,000 and $66,500 per year. This would permit 75 nights in these great places.
Throughout each scene, the calm, persuasive voice talked about what a great value this is. It was a, "How can you put a price on such an opportunity to have pampered fun with your family and friends."
WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?!?! Besides the fact that I am way too frugal, or cheap, to pay this much if I had the money, I could not even pay the annual fee for the “cheap” package. I guess some people have ponied up the money; Quintess says they have a 6:1 member to property ratio, which would translate to around 200 members. But, why would these people expend this much in such a conspicuous consumption?
As I gathered the facts about this company and their offering, I wondered whether these people who are the privileged members of Quintess donate as much money to charitable groups that provide medicine to children in Africa to stop diarrhea or measles or provide food to the hungry or education to Afghan children as they do to enjoy the finest service at top shelf resorts.
I have to wonder, “What were they thinking?”
Saturday, February 16, 2008
WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?
Posted by michael at 8:17 PM 0 comments
So, Kiss Me, Kate
Vicki and I spent last night at the Swanson Center, Piedmont's new Mass Com and Theater Building for the Opening Night of the Cole Porter musical, Kiss Me, Kate.
Porter used the "play within a play" device to tell the story of the triumph of true love. The storyline is simple. A theatrical group is performing a version of Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew in 1940's Baltimore. The male and female leads used to be married to each other. Now, each has found a new love. But, as is typical with a Porter production, while they go through rather comical mishaps and misunderstandings, they will eventually "find" each other again.
Many well known Porter standards are in the production, like, "Another Opening, Another Show," "So In Love," "Too Darn Hot," and "Wundebar."
Once again, this was an enjoyable evening, made more so by our contacts with the players in other settings.
Posted by michael at 2:54 PM 1 comments
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Tragedy at Northern Illinois University
In a scene that has become all too familiar, a gunman entered a lecture hall at Northern Illinois University and opened fire. The last reports I saw indicated that 6 people, including the shooter, had died. This follows a number of other shootings - February 8 in Louisiana and February 11 in Memphis - that were mentioned in the national media and somehow seem to have vanished from the national consciousness.
I wish I understood why such violence has become so commonplace. I wish I knew why such things take place in America more than in other countries. I wish I knew how we, as a people, could guarantee such a tragedy would never happen again, but I fear that it will. I wish I understood how such tragedies can fade so quickly from our awareness. What does any of this say about us as a people?
Join with me, please, in offering prayers for the families of these who have died.
UPDATE - This morning's news reports said one more of the shooting victims died. Info about the shooter - a 27 year old graduate of NIU with no history of behavior that would indicate something like this - is coming out. Accounts of students inside the lecture hall indicate that the shooter reloaded.
With so many readily accessible public places in the US - malls, parks, schools, concert halls, theaters - that have no or little security, what are reasonable choices for gun control, plans for communication to alert people to such situations, and security that we, as a people, should consider?
Posted by michael at 7:27 PM 1 comments
Sunday, February 10, 2008
ATTENTION Coffee Lovers
I started drinking coffee when I was in college. At that time, I was a Chemical Engineering student at the University of Tennessee Knoxville and was a co-op at the Champion Paper Company in Canton, North Carolina. In the lab where I worked, there were at least three coffee pots going at all times. In order to drink anything else, I had to walk through the plant - and anyone who has ever had to walk through a paper plant knows all that means - to find a soft drink machine or to get to the cafeteria.
I left the engineering program, but I never abandoned drinking coffee. Coffee was my companion through all the rest of my educational path - every degree - and at every job I have had since. Many people at churches I have served believe that my right hand is curved in a perpetual "cup holding" curve.
I give my bona fides because I want to alert anyone who loves really good coffee and wants to make a positive difference to something extraordinary. Last Summer, through the Sweetwater Coffee House in Sautee, Georgia, I discovered the Thanksgiving Coffee Company. This company was one of the first fair-trade companies operating in the United States. That means the company has pledged to pay a fair price to the farmers who actually grow the coffee.
Through Thanksgiving Coffee, I discovered Mirembe Kawomera coffee. This coffee is grown in Uganda by a co-operative of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim farmers. Thanksgiving Coffee has pledged to buy the entire crop produced. In addition to paying fair-trade prices ($1.61 per pound which is MANY times more than a farmer would get from the grocery store coffee brands), Thanksgiving Coffee gives back $1 to the co-operative for every pound of coffee it sells.
Let me encourage you to look at the web-site, http://www.mirembekawomera.com/, to get the full story. AND, let me encourage you to present information about this coffee to your community of faith, within your neighborhood, and with all of your friends who love coffee. THEN, ORDER COFFEE.
Covenant Congregational Church, which I serve as pastor, ordered coffee from Thanksgiving Coffee last Fall. I cannot say enough good things about the service we got and about the quality of the coffee. It is wonderful to know that we are making a difference in this part of the world just by drinking good coffee.
COFFEE LOVERS ARISE!!
Posted by michael at 5:57 PM 0 comments