By Chris Ziegler
Harry Smith was a visionary in the truest sense, exploring questions of humanity and philosophy through fantastically diverse means. Weekly Music section readers will know his culture-changing Anthology of American Folk Music, but Smith had kaleidoscopic talents and taste in music, art, film and more. As many have said, his life itself was a work of art. In 2010, L.A.'s electronic producer Flying Lotus, a similarly ravenous philosopher and polymath, first performed a new live score for one of Smith's hallmark films, the hand-painted, symbolic collages animated into life in the '60s as Heaven and Earth Magic. The result was something between revelation and resurrection: two seekers united in conversation, the years between dissolved away. The word "cosmic" can be used one rightful last time to describe this night, and then it must be happily retired forever.
Price: $10-$12
Our blog is about creative inspiring actions and deeds happening all over the world at any given moment.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Broken Trust in God’s Country
“Hello: At A & M Investments our aim was to provide a decent rate of interest and for a number of years it worked. However some investments in stocks and bonds should not have been made and when they went bad I should have asked for advice from other people and the church. Instead I kept this to myself and went on hoping to recover at least some of the loss. But then we were forced to shut down at a low point in the economy and the loss is large. I am really sorry for this.”
He concluded: “I have made a confession to God and the church and feel I have been forgiven. I hope you can forgive me too.”
For the Amish plan to be put into action, the bankruptcy court would have had to dismiss Mr. Beachy’s case and turn back the clock to the moment before his filing. Only then could his dealings with creditors follow a different path.
The committee’s vigorous campaign to have the Beachy case dismissed, based on the First Amendment’s religious freedom protections and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, won wide support. More than 2,300 creditors filed form letters with the court endorsing the plan.
THERE may have been some practical reasons for that. The public’s fascination with the charm of the Amish is the bedrock of the tourist economy here, and the Sugarcreek scandal was an ugly scar on that landscape. A solution emphasizing fundamental Amish values might well neutralize any damage that the Beachy case inflicted on the Amish image.
But the campaign’s intensity left some non-Amish creditors feeling uncomfortable. One grandmother recalled attending a meeting at which supporters insisted on a “standing vote,” not a secret ballot. She opposed the plan, she said, but she remained seated because she felt intimidated at having her position exposed publicly.
No such qualms afflicted the S.E.C. legal staff, the United States Trustee’s office and the bankruptcy trustee. In court, they all stood firmly against the alternative plan. It would lack judicial oversight and protections against mismanagement or unequal treatment, they argued. And it could well be unconstitutionally unfair to a small minority of non-Amish creditors, who would be steered out of court and into a religious forum tacitly endorsed by the government.
Last March, Federal Bankruptcy Judge Russ Kendig in Canton, in the federal courthouse closest to Sugarcreek, ruled that “delegating insolvency proceedings to a religious body” would be unconstitutional.
Given the high constitutional hurdle, the judge said, Mr. Beachy simply had not “met his burden” for showing why his case should be dismissed after it had started moving through the court. Once “the rock begins to roll,” he concluded, something much stronger than a change of mind is required to stop it.
No part of this story contrasts as sharply with the real Bernie Madoff case as what happened next.
In the Madoff bankruptcy, virtually every adverse ruling has been appealed by the losing side, as have disputed decisions in countless other high-profile bankruptcy cases. But when the Amish leaders lost their passionate plea, rooted in their deeply held religious beliefs, they simply sent the judge a letter.
“We are agreed among ourselves to accept your ruling as the will of Almighty God in this matter,” they wrote, after thanking him for considering their point of view so carefully. “If there is anything which we can do as members of the Amish-Mennonite community to facilitate the bankruptcy process and help bring it to a speedy conclusion please do not hesitate to contact any member” of the committee.
On Sept. 15, 2011, more than a year after Monroe Beachy closed his office and made his fateful trip to bankruptcy court, federal prosecutors held a press conference in Cleveland to announce that he had been indicted on mail fraud charges arising from a “scheme to defraud” that they said dated back to 1990.
He is scheduled to go to trial next month in Youngstown. If convicted, he faces a possible jail term of up to 20 years. His court-appointed defender, a prominent Youngstown criminal defense lawyer, J. Gerald Ingram, did not respond to messages seeking comment on the case.
The bankruptcy case in Canton, meanwhile, is moving forward. The trustee, Ms. Silagy, is optimistic that up to 50 cents on the dollar ultimately can be returned to investors, according to her lawyer, Bruce R. Schrader. Some creditors have filed letters with the court expressing frustration with the delay, but he said that only about 400 creditor claims, out of 2,600, have not been pursued in court.
The criminal trial, scheduled to open on March 19, will no doubt generate new headlines in Sugarcreek — which would much rather tell the world the sort of news it had last month: the village will soon install one of the world’s largest cuckoo clocks.
Mayor Clayton Weller of Sugarcreek says he hopes the trial will not cause renewed rancor. “I personally feel that the people are accepting what has happened,” he said. “They are understanding, and most of them are forgiving.”
But as the church fathers see it, something of lasting importance was tried in Sugarcreek.
“A hundred years from now, what will be the difference about how much money we had here?” asked Emery E. Miller, a village resident and a proponent of the alternative plan, at the first creditors meeting. “But a hundred years from now, there will be a difference in how we responded to this from our moral being, from a moral level — the choices we made to forgive or not to forgive.”
The Most Awesomest Winter thing ever: Rocket, Laser and Northern lights(auroa borealis)!
OK, that’s awesome. All it needs is a rampaging T-Rex to be the greatest single picture ever taken.
So what you’re seeing here is a wide-angle lens time exposure of a rocket launch on February 18, 2012, from Fairbanks Alaska at the Poker Flat The Auroa obvious enough; they’re the green glow in the sky. The bright streak is the rocket going up, and the pink hook halfway up is the first stage dropping away — note how the streak dims from the ground up to that point, then brightens again when the second stage ignited.
The green streak on the left is a laser being shot into the sky. Lasers excite (give energy to) atoms and molecules in the atmosphere, and that can be used to measure what’s going on up there. The beam appears to curve because this is a wide angle lens which distorts the geometry of the image.
So why the launch? On board the rocket was the Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling in the Alfvén resonator ...
Send Photos of your House
Casa Sugar is asking you to send them photos of your house.
For us, our house is our refuge from everything we deal with on a physical basis outside of our home. For us it is a calm safe refuge for our animals, from our jobs and our city energy.
Don't get us wrong, we are grateful to have jobs and we love the city. (Ha! We have a long way to go with consciousness training!)
Our home is our sanctuary. It is a literal "safe base" nothing can touch you when you are in your home even if your home is in your heart rather than a true abode;
same-same.
For us, our house is our refuge from everything we deal with on a physical basis outside of our home. For us it is a calm safe refuge for our animals, from our jobs and our city energy.
Don't get us wrong, we are grateful to have jobs and we love the city. (Ha! We have a long way to go with consciousness training!)
Our home is our sanctuary. It is a literal "safe base" nothing can touch you when you are in your home even if your home is in your heart rather than a true abode;
same-same.
East L.A. Skaters take to the Air
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Photos by C.J. Salgado
The five-year-old Belvedere Skatepark in East Los Angeles was busier – and nosier – than usual on Saturday during a competition and fundraiser. C.J. Salgado provided photos and details:
Dozens of daring and talented youth and their families enjoyed watching fellow skateboarders launch into aerial maneuvers in the hope of winning a contest or just having fun in the sun. Others just cheered contestants on or painted pretend skateboards in fancy color schemes. The event was sponsored by The Garage Board Shop in ELA in concert with the American Cancer Society’s “Relay for Life” series of events to raise funds for cancer research and other programs
Photos by C.J. Salgado
The five-year-old Belvedere Skatepark in East Los Angeles was busier – and nosier – than usual on Saturday during a competition and fundraiser. C.J. Salgado provided photos and details:
Dozens of daring and talented youth and their families enjoyed watching fellow skateboarders launch into aerial maneuvers in the hope of winning a contest or just having fun in the sun. Others just cheered contestants on or painted pretend skateboards in fancy color schemes. The event was sponsored by The Garage Board Shop in ELA in concert with the American Cancer Society’s “Relay for Life” series of events to raise funds for cancer research and other programs
Discontented Senegalese Vote for President
A long line of voters waited outside a polling station in Dakar.
By ADAM NOSSITER
DAKAR, Senegal — A volatile test for this small West African nation’s established democracy unfolded Sunday as voters decided whether the country’s elderly president should be permitted to stay in power.
A woman cast her ballot in Dakar on Sunday.
President Abdoulaye Wade, reported to be 85 but probably older, is seeking a third term in presidential elections in spite of a constitutional limit of two. His decision to press for continued power, sanctified by hand-picked lawyers and judges, has created an uproar in a peaceful country used to looking askance at African neighbors where democratic rules are regularly flouted.
After weeks of sporadic protests downtown, rock-throwing at police and tear-gas volleys in response, voters filled the sandy courtyards of dilapidated school buildings and other polling places Sunday to choose between Mr. Wade, a French-trained lawyer and five-decade veteran of his country’s voluble politics, or one of a field 13 opponents, including three of his six former prime ministers. Mr. Wade himself was loudly booed as he went to vote Sunday in his home precinct in the capital.
At one polling place, a school in the working-class Dakar neighborhood of Ouakam, the mood was largely against the president, who has been in power since 2000. Repeatedly, people expressed anger that Mr. Wade was showing disrespect for the law and Senegal’s tradition of free democracy, strongly anchored here in a country that has never seen a military coup d’état.
And long queues of citizens — much longer than normal, some said — snaked around the low, tan-colored school building to vote under palm trees in brilliant sunshine. Many were young, a group especially disenchanted with the elderly Mr. Wade and hard-hit by the country’s unemployment crisis, with a rate of over 50 percent.
“The country is in danger. We’ve got a president who doesn’t have the right to three terms,” said Mamadou Gueye, a 35-year-old tobacco-company executive.
Mansour Diop, a 41-year-old hospital administrator, said: “We’ve got a president who wants a third term, which is totally against the constitution. It’s not allowed. He tried to force things, and now, see what this has brought.”
Mr Diop added, “I don’t even consider him a candidate.”
There will be a second voting round in March if none of the candidates wins more than 50 percent. Results from the first round are expected later in the week.
Mr. Wade has built roads and highways during his years in power, but his government has also been accused of corruption, an issue that has been raised repeated in American diplomatic cables about Senegal that have been released by Wikileaks. He is also accused of squandering scarce resources in an impoverished, aid-dependent country.
A giant 180-foot high, $27 million Soviet-realism style statue to the “African Renaissance,” erected by Mr. Wade towering over Ouakam, has emerged as a symbol of the president’s misplaced priorities in a country where the poverty rate is well over 50 percent.
“He likes power because he loves the privileges,” said a principal opponent, Macky Sall, one of Mr. Wade’s former prime ministers, in an interview here. “The cars, the planes, the money.”
Senegal’s place on the United Nations Human Development Index has hardly changed under his mandate, and it still must import more than half its rice, the national staple, despite loudly trumpeted but largely unrealized plans to transform the faltering agricultural sector, a major employer for this country of 12.5 million people.
Mr. Wade’s determination to run for a third term has been openly criticized by the country’s principal aid donors, France and the United States, with both countries suggesting in the weeks leading up to the election that he should reconsider. “For us it is somewhat regrettable,” a top State Department official, William Fitzgerald, told French radio in January, commenting on Mr. Wade’s candidacy.
These strictures from abroad have infuriated the prickly Mr. Wade, one of the last of his founding generation of African nationalists. “I am not docile,” Mr. Wade told the French newspaper Journal du Dimanche this weekend. “Like Senghor, I would reply, ‘I am not a Negro house-boy,’ ” he said, referring to the country’s revered founding president, the poet Leopold Sedar Senghor.
Meanwhile, there are fears that the unrest — small-scale so far, with a well-trained police force largely showing restraint — might spill over into something uglier if Mr. Wade is declared the winner.
“If Wade says he has won, I’m afraid it will be like the Ivory Coast,” said one voter Sunday, Alassane Ndiaye, a wood-worker, 34, referring to the recent civil war in that country spurred by the president’s refusal to give up power after losing an election. “It will bring chaos.”
Published: February 26, 2012
By ADAM NOSSITER
DAKAR, Senegal — A volatile test for this small West African nation’s established democracy unfolded Sunday as voters decided whether the country’s elderly president should be permitted to stay in power.
A woman cast her ballot in Dakar on Sunday.
President Abdoulaye Wade, reported to be 85 but probably older, is seeking a third term in presidential elections in spite of a constitutional limit of two. His decision to press for continued power, sanctified by hand-picked lawyers and judges, has created an uproar in a peaceful country used to looking askance at African neighbors where democratic rules are regularly flouted.
After weeks of sporadic protests downtown, rock-throwing at police and tear-gas volleys in response, voters filled the sandy courtyards of dilapidated school buildings and other polling places Sunday to choose between Mr. Wade, a French-trained lawyer and five-decade veteran of his country’s voluble politics, or one of a field 13 opponents, including three of his six former prime ministers. Mr. Wade himself was loudly booed as he went to vote Sunday in his home precinct in the capital.
At one polling place, a school in the working-class Dakar neighborhood of Ouakam, the mood was largely against the president, who has been in power since 2000. Repeatedly, people expressed anger that Mr. Wade was showing disrespect for the law and Senegal’s tradition of free democracy, strongly anchored here in a country that has never seen a military coup d’état.
And long queues of citizens — much longer than normal, some said — snaked around the low, tan-colored school building to vote under palm trees in brilliant sunshine. Many were young, a group especially disenchanted with the elderly Mr. Wade and hard-hit by the country’s unemployment crisis, with a rate of over 50 percent.
“The country is in danger. We’ve got a president who doesn’t have the right to three terms,” said Mamadou Gueye, a 35-year-old tobacco-company executive.
Mansour Diop, a 41-year-old hospital administrator, said: “We’ve got a president who wants a third term, which is totally against the constitution. It’s not allowed. He tried to force things, and now, see what this has brought.”
Mr Diop added, “I don’t even consider him a candidate.”
There will be a second voting round in March if none of the candidates wins more than 50 percent. Results from the first round are expected later in the week.
Mr. Wade has built roads and highways during his years in power, but his government has also been accused of corruption, an issue that has been raised repeated in American diplomatic cables about Senegal that have been released by Wikileaks. He is also accused of squandering scarce resources in an impoverished, aid-dependent country.
A giant 180-foot high, $27 million Soviet-realism style statue to the “African Renaissance,” erected by Mr. Wade towering over Ouakam, has emerged as a symbol of the president’s misplaced priorities in a country where the poverty rate is well over 50 percent.
“He likes power because he loves the privileges,” said a principal opponent, Macky Sall, one of Mr. Wade’s former prime ministers, in an interview here. “The cars, the planes, the money.”
Senegal’s place on the United Nations Human Development Index has hardly changed under his mandate, and it still must import more than half its rice, the national staple, despite loudly trumpeted but largely unrealized plans to transform the faltering agricultural sector, a major employer for this country of 12.5 million people.
Mr. Wade’s determination to run for a third term has been openly criticized by the country’s principal aid donors, France and the United States, with both countries suggesting in the weeks leading up to the election that he should reconsider. “For us it is somewhat regrettable,” a top State Department official, William Fitzgerald, told French radio in January, commenting on Mr. Wade’s candidacy.
These strictures from abroad have infuriated the prickly Mr. Wade, one of the last of his founding generation of African nationalists. “I am not docile,” Mr. Wade told the French newspaper Journal du Dimanche this weekend. “Like Senghor, I would reply, ‘I am not a Negro house-boy,’ ” he said, referring to the country’s revered founding president, the poet Leopold Sedar Senghor.
Meanwhile, there are fears that the unrest — small-scale so far, with a well-trained police force largely showing restraint — might spill over into something uglier if Mr. Wade is declared the winner.
“If Wade says he has won, I’m afraid it will be like the Ivory Coast,” said one voter Sunday, Alassane Ndiaye, a wood-worker, 34, referring to the recent civil war in that country spurred by the president’s refusal to give up power after losing an election. “It will bring chaos.”
Published: February 26, 2012
Healthy Vegan Split Peas Recipe
Ingredients (use vegan versions):
1 cup yellow split peas
1 piece kombu, optional
3 sunburst zucchini, chopped
3 carrots, chopped
1 teaspoon olive oil
pinch sea salt
1 teaspoon dill
1 tablespoon chives, chopped (or green onion)
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast, optional
sea salt and pepper, to taste
Directions:
1. Split peas do not need to be soaked before cooking, but if you like to it doesn't hurt to soak them for an hour. Add enough water to cover the peas by 2".
2. Gently boil them with no salt. You can add a bit of kombu to the cooking water while they boil for improved digestibility. Split peas will take about 30 minutes to cook.
3. Add vegetables to a baking dish. Drizzle a small amount of olive oil over them, then stir them to coat with hands. Next, sprinkle a pinch salt and mix that over the vegetables as well.
4. At this point, you can put them in the oven until the peas finish cooking and the vegetables soften slightly. If you like your carrots soft, put them in on their own first as they will take longer to cook than the zucchini.
5. Add the dill, chives and nutritional yeast (if using) with the split peas and stir in the vegetables. Season with salt and pepper, and put the whole thing back in the oven for 10 minutes, until the vegetables are softened to your liking.
Source of recipe: To watch a free video of me making this healthy vegan split peas recipe, so I can show you the exact techniques that will make the perfect recipe, go to http://www.healthyveganrecipes.net/video/split-peas-recipe
Makes: 2-3 large servings, Preparation time: 10 min, Cooking time: 40 min
1 cup yellow split peas
1 piece kombu, optional
3 sunburst zucchini, chopped
3 carrots, chopped
1 teaspoon olive oil
pinch sea salt
1 teaspoon dill
1 tablespoon chives, chopped (or green onion)
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast, optional
sea salt and pepper, to taste
Directions:
1. Split peas do not need to be soaked before cooking, but if you like to it doesn't hurt to soak them for an hour. Add enough water to cover the peas by 2".
2. Gently boil them with no salt. You can add a bit of kombu to the cooking water while they boil for improved digestibility. Split peas will take about 30 minutes to cook.
3. Add vegetables to a baking dish. Drizzle a small amount of olive oil over them, then stir them to coat with hands. Next, sprinkle a pinch salt and mix that over the vegetables as well.
4. At this point, you can put them in the oven until the peas finish cooking and the vegetables soften slightly. If you like your carrots soft, put them in on their own first as they will take longer to cook than the zucchini.
5. Add the dill, chives and nutritional yeast (if using) with the split peas and stir in the vegetables. Season with salt and pepper, and put the whole thing back in the oven for 10 minutes, until the vegetables are softened to your liking.
Source of recipe: To watch a free video of me making this healthy vegan split peas recipe, so I can show you the exact techniques that will make the perfect recipe, go to http://www.healthyveganrecipes.net/video/split-peas-recipe
Makes: 2-3 large servings, Preparation time: 10 min, Cooking time: 40 min
Will We ever Decode Dreams??
As mentioned before, I’ve got a new column at the BBC’s new sci/tech site, where I explore the steps we’ll take towards far-flung applications of basic scientific research.
You wake up. You were dreaming, but in the haze of morning, you cannot quite remember what ran through your head. Childhood acquaintances were there. You were in Australia. One guy was a pirate. There was something about a cow. Perhaps. We have all had similarly murky memories of an earlier night’s dream. But what if you could actually record your dreaming brain? Could you reconstruct the stories that play out in your head?
It appears to be plausible. Science fiction is full of machines that can peer inside our heads and decipher our thoughts, and science, it seems, is catching up. The news abounds with tales of scientists who have created “mind-reading” machines that can convert our thoughts into images, most of these stories including a throwaway line about one day recording our dreams. But visualising our everyday thoughts is no easy matter, and dream-reading is more difficult still.
The task of decoding dreams comes down to interpreting the activity of the brain’s 100 billion or so neurons, or nerve cells. And to interpret, you first have to measure. Contrary to the hype, our tools for measuring human brain activity leave a lot to be desired. “Our methods are really lousy,” says
Professor Jack Gallant, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Berkeley.
Some techniques, like electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG), measure the electric and magnetic fields that we produce when our neurons fire. Their resolution is terrible. They can only home in on 5-10 millimetres of brain tissue at a time at best – a space that contains only a few hundred million neurons. And because of the folded nature of the brain, those neurons can be located in nearby areas that have radically different functions.
More recently, some scientists have used small grids of electrodes to isolate the activity of a handful of neurons. You get much better spatial resolution, but with two disadvantages: you can only look at a tiny portion of the brain, and you need to open up a hole in the volunteer’s skull first. It is not exactly a technique that is ready for the mass market.
Other methods are indirect. The most common one, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), is the darling of modern neuroscience. Neurons need sugar and oxygen to fuel their activity, and local blood vessels must increase their supply to meet the demand. It’s this blood flow that fMRI measures, and the information is used to create an activation map of the brain. However, this provides only an indirect echo of neural activity, according to Gallant. “Imagine you tried to work out what was going on in an office, but rather than asking people what they did, you went into the kitchen to see how much water they used,” he says.
Seeking Yoda
Despite these weaknesses, Gallant has repeatedly used fMRI to decipher the images encoded in our brain activity. For his latest trick, three of his team watched hours of YouTube clips while Gallant scanned the visual centres of their brains. He plugged the data into a mathematical model that acted as a brain-movie “dictionary”, capable of translating neural activity into moving images. The dictionary could later reconstruct what the volunteers saw, by scanning hours of random clips and finding those that matched any particular burst of brain activity.
The reconstructed images were blurry and grainy, but Gallant thinks that this will improve with time, as we develop better ways of measuring brain activity, better models for analysing it and faster computers to handle the intense processing. “Science marches on,” he says. “You know that in the future, it will be possible to measure brain activity better than you can today.”
While Gallant decodes what we see, Moran Cerf from the California Institute of Technology is decoding what we think about. He uses tiny electrodes to measure the activity of individual neurons in the hippocampus, a part of the brain involved in creating memories. In this way, he can identify neurons that fire in response to specific concepts – say, Marilyn Monroe or Yoda. Cerf’s work is a lot like Gallant’s – he effectively creates a dictionary that links concepts to patterns of neural activity. “You think about something and because we learned what your brain looks like when you think about that thing, we can make inferences,” he says.
But both techniques share similar limitations. To compile the dictionaries, people need to look at a huge number of videos or concepts. To truly visualise a person’s thoughts, Cerf says, “That person would need to look at all the concepts in the world, one by one. People don’t want to sit there for hours or days so that I can learn about their brain.”
Dream album
So, visualising what someone is thinking is hard enough. When that person is dreaming, things get even tougher. Dreams have convoluted stories that are hard to break down into sequences of images or concepts. “When you dream, it’s not just image by image,” says Cerf. “Let’s say I scanned your brain while you were dreaming, and I see you thinking of Marilyn Monroe, or love, or Barack Obama. I see pictures. You see you and Marilyn Monroe, whom you’re in love with, going to see Barack Obama giving a speech. The narrative is the key thing we’re going to miss.”
You would also have to repeat this for each new person. The brain is not a set of specified drawers where information is filed in a fixed way. No two brains are organised in quite the same fashion. “Even if I know everything about your brain and where things are, it doesn’t tell me anything about my brain,” says Cerf.
There are some exceptions. A small number of people have regular ‘lucid dreams’, where they are aware that they are dreaming and can partially communicate with the outside world. Martin Dresler and Michael Czisch from the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry exploited this rare trait. They told two lucid dreamers to dream about clenching and unclenching their hands, while flicking their eyes from side to side. These dream movements translated into real flickers, which told Dresler and Czisch when the dreams had begun. They found that the dream movements activated the volunteers’ motor cortex – the area that controls our movements – in the same way that real-world movements do.
The study was an interesting proof-of-principle, but it is a long way from reading normal dreams. “We don’t know if this would work on non-lucid dreams. I’m skeptical that even in the medium-term future that you’d ever have devices for reading dreams,” says Dresler. “The devices you have in wakefulness are very far from reading your mind or thoughts, even in the next couple of decades.”
Even if those devices improve by leaps and bounds, reading a sleeping mind poses great, perhaps insurmountable challenges. The greatest of them is that you cannot really compare the images and stories you reconstruct with what a person actually dreamt. After all, our memories of our dreams are hazy at the best of times. “You have no ground-truthing,” says Gallant. It is like compiling a dictionary between one language and another that you cannot actually read. One day, we might be able to convert the activity of dreaming neurons into sounds and sights. But how would we ever know that we have done it correctly?
What are the World's Root Problems?
by Cory Doctorow
The world faces many problems – some of these are root problems which, if we strike at them first, will make it far easier to solve many other problems:
1. Corrupt Campaign Financing Laws: Even if we find good solutions, as long as politicians hear the campaign funders more than they hear the people, and are too busy raising cash, our democratic votes and voice becomes near irrelevant. Laws are passed which help those who hold the most cash, not society at large. Tag things with rootstrike1
2. Media Distraction and Bias: Even if we find good solutions, as long as mainstream media ignore what’s important – focusing on personality and party battles instead of systematic problems, and shying away from structural criticism – it’s harder for citizens to get active together. Self-made social news sites as well as online communication channels are a part of the solution. Tag things with rootstrike2
3. Online Censorship Through Blocking and Overly Restrictive Copyright: Even if we find good solutions, if we cannot freely spread them, they cannot be seen and implemented. Activists, artists and everyone else needs to be able to reflect on the world, and freely voice their thoughts. Tag things with rootstrike3
Modern and Classic Design
Name: David & John
Location: West Village, New York City
The apartment blends two distinct tastes, into a cohesive style: The traditional taste of John based on the Art Deco style of the building and David's modern tastes.
John, a Philadelphia born lawyer, with fairly traditional taste in interior design had lived in this West Village Art Deco condominium for fifteen years. It was furnished with a mix of old family pieces and antiques collected over the years for various former homes in Philadelphia, Washington DC and Connecticut. When David, a British architect and partner in DAS Studio (an architectural and interior design firm in Manhattan), moved into the apartment they decided it was an opportune time to redesign the space combining the best of both styles.
The result is an apartment that reflects two different tastes cohesively merged into one creating a calm and welcoming atmosphere.
Thanks David!
• Interested in sharing your home with Apartment Therapy? Contact the editors through our House Tour Submission Form.
Toronto Teens send Lego Minifig up 78,000 feet
Goli of MAKE says:
Two young makers from Toronto, Mathew Ho and Asad Muhammad, both age 17, successfully sent a Lego minifig and four cameras to roughly 78,000 feet elevation on a homemade weather balloon. After a 97-minute flight, the balloon returned to Earth with great footage of the journey. Inspired by a similar project done by MIT students, they were determined to make everything from scratch, down to sewing the 5-foot-diameter parachute. After about five months worth of weekends devoted to the build, they did it, and have some great photos to show for their hard work. Check out the video posted on the Toronto Star to hear them talk about their project and to see their balloon pics.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Hello! We have gone MIA on the Blog but now we are back.
We have fragrant sweet peas growing as well as pelagorniams (scented geraniums), rose scented, ginger, cedar and nutmeg and we planted a gardenia bush as well as a patchouli plant.
With the already existing jasmine our scented garden patio will be heavenly this summer.
We'll be able to harvest leaves and put them into a filigree iron pot
The trimmed leaves not only add to the plant health but grant your house with a natural fragrance all year long.
With the already existing jasmine our scented garden patio will be heavenly this summer.
We'll be able to harvest leaves and put them into a filigree iron pot
The trimmed leaves not only add to the plant health but grant your house with a natural fragrance all year long.
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