There are 7 distinctly famous worldly wonders which inspire awe and
demand intrigue, but mostly in the way of their unfathomable beauty. In
Egypt, we have the Great Pyramids which to this day baffle even the most
learned of engineers and architects, in their precision of construction
and apparent lack of technological intervention (that is if you don’t
buy the “ancient aliens” theories). In Arizona, we have the Grand
Canyon, a profoundly gaping spectacle and standing proof of erosion’s
mighty shovel. But in addition to these marvels of human and natural
possibility, there also exists a darker counterpart: the creations and
residuals of what less-than-admirable events have occurred during our
collective human experience. These “infamous wonders of the world” must
be noted, however, for we can only grow from, and build off, what
hardships we endure and mistakes we make as people (the worst mistake of
all is often ignorance). Here are the top ten of such infamous wonders:
10. Guatemala City Sinkhole
This little wonder turned up last year in Guatemala in the wake of a
tropical storm and has been growing ever since, feeding on every
building in its grasp; even shoveling in rocks and miscellaneous debris
has failed to plug up the swelling problem. A sinkhole is said to occur
when soil layers beneath the top layer become too damp to support the
inundating weight above and ultimately give way. The result is a hole
that resembles a bottomless pit that leads straight to Hell, or at the
very least, the resting place of some giant alien pod a la H.G. Wells’
War of the Worlds.
9. Smog over L.A.
What better symbol than a looming cloud of filth to represent a
careless race of environmentally-oblivious individuals who think not of
the consequences of their waste. This very visible residue which can be
witnessed over the city of L.A. is largely the product of vehicle
emissions and industrial pollution. It goes without saying that smog is
harmful to the ozone and general human health, not to mention the fact
that it makes any city look like the setting of Ghostbusters 2.
8. Alcatraz
Caging such notorious criminals as Al Capone and Robert Stroud
(a.k.a. the “Birdman of Alcatraz), this facility, situated on its own
island off San Francisco, boasted itself as the virtual Titanic of
prisons. Several inmates managed to escape its confines (often
unsuccessfully, as most were either recaptured, shot on sight or lost at
sea). Inmates were frequently the worst of the worst: bootleggers,
armed bank robbers, murderers and big name gangsters. All being much
sought after guests of the Big House, they were each cordially invited
to stick around for a while.
7.Guantanamo Bay
Entirely unethical and totally getting away with it, “Gitmo” is a
detention facility located outside U.S. legal jurisdiction and away from
the eyes of God. Cruel and unusual torture practices from
“water-boarding” (simulated drowning) to blasting terrible music at
deafening volumes have been used to extract information here. Just
imagining the prospect of forcefully being exposed to Justin Bieber or
The Jonas Brothers on loop induces chills.
6. Trail of Tears
Now a designated historical site, the original “Trail of Tears” was
the interstate pathway where countless Native Americans (with the
assistance of the Indian Removal Act set forth by President Andrew
Jackson) were rounded up and forced to evacuate their homes, being
herded into concentration camps and wherever else white settlers didn’t
much care to build a saloon-having ghost town. As a result, many died –
if they were not killed intentionally – of disease and starvation. A
dark chapter in American history, it wouldn’t be the first or last time
an entire race of humans was treated like cattle.
5.The Ashes of Pompeii
An ancient Roman city was almost lost as it became buried under
layers of volcanic ash. Once it became unearthed, a portal to the daily
lives of local citizens was opened up. Also unearthed were corpses
striking death-poses, revealing their last configurations before so many
were killed by the devastating, two day-long eruption of Mount
Vesuvius, in 79 AD. While previously it was thought that these
citizens-turned-living-sculptures were asphyxiated by an avalanche of
ash, recent finding have suggested that cause of death may more likely
have been attributed to high heat exposure.
4.Little Boy’s Shadow
A bad day in wartime history, countless innocents melted away when we
dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima. A name like “Little Boy” is
disingenuous given the massive, immediate and long-term destruction
that was wrought (many of those exposed to the radiation are still
suffering the horrifying side-effects). As if deteriorating flesh and
structural disarray wasn’t enough of a scar on the city, shadows are
permanently fixed all about, burnt-in imprints left behind like tanning
bed tattoos, taking the shape of etched flowers on telephone poles and
outlined guardrails on the streets. Some memories simply don’t wash
away.
3.Ground Zero
Ten years and a few days later, and the United States is picking up
the pieces (in a matter of speaking) of what waste was made of the World
Trade Center towers. Those with any connection to the tragic event
relive it every year when the 9/11 specials and documentaries spill
through the floodgates of news opportunism. Recently a cemented tribute,
in the way of a memorial, was constructed so as to immortalize those
fallen by displaying their names in engraved text.
2. Chernobyl
There is a serious consequence to not vying for safer, more
environmentally-friendly forms of energy generation (windmills, water
turbines, etc.) in favor of nuclear energy: risk of meltdown. Before
Japan taught us the risks of constructing dangerous power plants in
earthquake-and-tsunami-prone hot spots, there was Chernobyl. In 1986,
the world’s worst nuclear reactor disaster occurred in Ukraine, as the
power plant exploded and released an abundance of radioactive material,
which is still killing and crippling people to this day. Speaking of
crippling effects, the Soviet Union’s economy was rigorously torn apart,
effectively setting up the impending collapse of the USSR. After a
spill like that, Paul McCartney’s lyrics are given a new, cynical
meaning when he sings “I’m back in the USSR, you don’t know how lucky
you are, boy.”
1. Auschwitz
You can visit the Auschwitz historical museum whenever you want to
step back in time – back to when genocidal monsters roamed freely about
the earth. The largest of all the Nazi death camps during the Holocaust,
Auschwitz was personally responsible for the death of over a million
Jews (many other non-Jews were killed, in addition), and made for a sort
of Marriot-from-Hell, wherein shower heads gushed poison gas in mock
bathrooms, and crematoriums vacuumed up any evidence of an unpleasant
stay. It’s good, in spite of all the unabashed evil, that the site has
been restored and turned into a museum so future generations can learn
what the human race is capable of.
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