Freegan

Yay, I was wondering when Beatniks were coming back. Good work freegans!

Freegans are people who are concerned so deeply with the social and ecological impact of economic over-consumption that they choose to buy and work as little as possible and, instead, to live directly off the massive waste created by our modern society. Freegans avoid contributing labor or wealth to an economy based on materialism, explotation, greed and waste by refusing to participate in it. Instead of producing their own waste, Freegans sustain themselves off the already existing waste thereby curtailing garbage and pollution and lessening the over-all volume in the waste stream.

Web link of note: Freegan
(At http://freegan.info/)

The Internationale in 20 languages

you know you want it you pinko!

Billy Bragg’s famous version does NOT use the original lyrics.

  • Wikipedia entry on the Internationale. Yes I know I am a Wikipedia whore.

Bragg version:

Stand up, all victims of oppression
For the tyrants fear your might
DonÂ’t cling so hard to your possessions
For you have nothing, if you have no rights
Let racist ignorance be ended
For respect makes the empires fall
Freedom is merely privilege extended
Unless enjoyed by one and all

Chorus:
So come brothers and sisters
For the struggle carries on
The internationale
Unites the world in song
So comrades come rally
For this is the time and place
The international ideal
Unites the human race

Let no one build walls to divide us
Walls of hatred nor walls of stone
Come greet the dawn and stand beside us
WeÂ’ll live together or weÂ’ll die alone
In our world poisoned by exploitation
Those who have taken, now they must give
And end the vanity of nations
WeÂ’ve but one earth on which to live

And so begins the final drama
In the streets and in the fields
We stand unbowed before their armour
We defy their guns and shields
When we fight, provoked by their aggression
Let us be inspired by like and love
For though they offer us concessions
Change will not come from above

Original (translated from French)- I never realized how toned down the modern versions are. Take note of the parts which deprecates messianistic religion, and the previous verse which calls for treason. Actually, I guess the verses are arranged by scale of rebellion- the last being a rebellion against God.

Arise ye workers [starvelings] from your slumbers
Arise ye prisoners of want
For reason in revolt now thunders
And at last ends the age of cant.
Away with all your superstitions
Servile masses arise, arise
We’ll change henceforth [forthwith] the old tradition [conditions]
And spurn the dust to win the prize.

So comrades, come rally
And the last fight let us face
The Internationale unites the human race.
So comrades, come rally
And the last fight let us face
The Internationale unites the human race.

No more deluded by reaction
On tyrants only we’ll make war
The soldiers too will take strike action
They’ll break ranks and fight no more
And if those cannibals keep trying
To sacrifice us to their pride
They soon shall hear the bullets flying
We’ll shoot the generals on our own side.

No saviour from on high delivers
No faith have we in prince or peer
Our own right hand the chains must shiver
Chains of hatred, greed and fear
E’er the thieves will out with their booty [give up their booty]
And give to all a happier lot.
Each [those] at the forge must do their duty
And we’ll strike while the iron is hot.

Web link of note: The Internationale in 20 languages
(At http://www.hymn.ru/internationale/index-en.html)

Assassination Vacation

What do you get when a woman who’s obsessed with death and U.S. history goes on vacation? This wacky, weirdly enthralling exploration of the first three presidential assassinations. Vowell ( The Partly Cloudy Patriot), a contributor to NPR’s This American Life and the voice of teenage superhero Violet Parr in The Incredibles, takes readers on a pilgrimage of sorts to the sites and monuments that pay homage to Lincoln, Garfield and McKinley, visiting everything from grave sites and simple plaques (like the one in Buffalo that marks the place where McKinley was shot) to places like the National Museum of Health and Medicine, where fragments of Lincoln’s skull are on display. An expert tour guide, Vowell brings into sharp focus not only the figures involved in the assassinations, but the social and political circumstances that led to each-and she does so in the witty, sometimes irreverent manner that her fans have come to expect. Thus, readers learn not only about how Garfield found himself caught between the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds, bitterly divided factions of the Republican party, but how his assassin, Charles Guiteau, a supporter of the Stalwarts and an occasional member of the Oneida Community, “was the one guy in a free love commune who could not get laid.” Vowell also draws frequent connections between past events and the present, noting similarities between McKinley’s preemptive war against Cuba and the Philippines and the current war in Iraq. This is history at its most morbid and most fascinating and, fortunately, one needn’t share Vowell’s interest in the macabre to thoroughly enjoy this unusual tour.

0743260031

Letterboxing: the Plague Years

I had always thought geocaching had sprung, fully-formed, from the skull of the geeky sport of orienteering, which is basically recreational map reading while running. But it is not so!

Geocaching is where you leave GPS coordinates listed somewhere for people to find… then they use their GPS to find a box buried somewhere which you left for them, along with maybe a notebook or prizes or something. Periodically you check the box for what mementos strangers left you…

But it’s very very very similar to letterboxing , an older hobby where you leave cryptic clues leading to the wherabouts of a buried box. I like the suggestion of leaving with your notebook a personalized rubber ink stamp, which the finder uses to stamp his own letterboxing log. He would also carry his own personal stamp, which he would use to leave a mark in the letterbox cache’s notebook. It reminds me of Japanese temples and other tourist stops, where they have stamps for any given place. I always stamped my big-ass road map of Japan with it. I think I have about half a dozen.

Letterboxing seems to me a very lonely hobby- maybe the kind of hobby you’d pick if you had some horrible disfigurement that made ordinary social interaction unlikely.

Or maybe, in the future, when plagues run rampant across the world and everyone stays their entire lives in their own quarantined village for fear of infection, letterboxing is a variant on the only way any inter-village commerce gets done. No human contact… Bandits cannot find your package, you know… they can barely read. Dirty untouchables. Be sure to autoclave the shipment when you find it! Be careful not to rip your environment suit! If you do, we won’t let you back in the village walls.

Letterboxing links:

Geocaching links:

What is the deal with these ASCII art cats?

A while ago I saw a flash movie of a little white cat in a cardboard box. She sings.

During the song she watches another (boy) cat walk by, who is apparently her boyfriend. He runs off with another cat.

The weird thing is- the boy cat looks like it has a “delta” character for a nose. Or the letter “de” in Russian.

Recently I figured out a couple of things:

  • The song is from a video game- Lunar: Silver Star Story Complete
  • The reason the cats look like they have letters in them is because they are ASCII art characters from the Japanese BBS “2ch”

How’s that for obscure.

Hey, did you notice the Japanese chatroom people make art with Russian characters? And we just have the Latin character set?

Know why?

BECAUSE WE ARE A BUNCH OF HICKS AND WE ARE FALLING BEHIND. EVERYONE ELSE IS SMARTER THAN US!

Quick! Go learn another language! It may not be too late for you!

Giko:

   _____∧∧   / ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄
〜' ____( ゚Д゚)<  逝ってよし!!
   UU    U U    \_______

Ducks and Oil

I love the duck pond.

My mom used to save the ends of sliced bread loaves in the freezer, and when we had enough once every couple months we would take them to the duck pond. We did this since before I could walk.

The best part was eating the bread with the ducks. It was like having a little picnic with them. I would feed the ducks the bread, and occasionally eat some of the stale bread if there wasn’t too much ice on it. They would wag their little tails and quack a lot.

When I was three, we moved to Palo Alto, which comes with its own private park that belongs to the city, Foothills Park. The park has a couple of lakes and some hiking trails. The ducks there living on one of the lakes can be reached by walking out on a pier. You drive through Los Altos Hills and get to the park; it is definitely not walking distance and may only be considered biking distance if you are a frequent rider.

One time, I couldn’t have been more than five, probably less, I was feeding the ducks, and eating bread with them, and some soccer mom approached me, and said something like “Don’t eat the bread! no!” apparently thinking I was feeding the ducks moldy bread and my own mother wasn’t watching me closely.

For a long time my mother would ask me if I wanted to go feed the ducks, and I would sadly tell her no. She couldn’t figure out why. But what was the point? You just throw some bread in the water… that’s entertainment? The interactive and empathetic parts of the experience were gone.

Eventually I got over it, maybe I forgot a little. But I don’t think I ever ate the bread with the ducks again. I still like feeding the ducks.

I don’t live in Palo Alto anymore, and neither do my parents, so I can’t get into the park these days.

Anyway the other day I was driving around the penninsula, and was stopping at a crosswalk in downtown Palo Alto, and crossing the street is the SAME SOCCER MOM. It had to be her, twenty years later, and she was walking her little dog.

I hadn’t come to a full stop yet, so I jammed on the accelerator, neatly stopping the front left wheel of my black beamer directly on her tiny dog, the leash still connected to her hand. I shouted at her “KEEP YOUR FUCKIN NOSE OUT OF MY STALE BREAD BITCH!”

She mumbled something while looking at my fine automobile, probably an apology of sorts. Her hands made a slight wringing motion. I think she finally saw the error of her ways. I really think we made a connection and some healing happened that day.

Come to think of it I should buy some nice bread so I can feed the ducks and eat at the same time and not feel guilty and victimized. The bread should be whole grain and organic and horrifically expensive, and preferably be made with a bone meal made from young children who live in Palo Alto.

I can’t help but think about the impact of feeding the ducks bread. The white bread isn’t as good for them as their normal diet of weeds and small insects. They get simultaneously fat and malnourished. Their population explodes.

Then, one day, there is a dip in volume of people feeding the ducks. Who knows why- maybe people stop eating bread; maybe the jobs in the area move away and the people with them. But now the ducks are forced to go back to their natural food sources. And there isn’t enough.

There is a massive duck die-off. Some survive on the smaller natural food, and are healthier… but there just isn’t enough to go around. Most of the ducks die until their dwindling population can be supported by their environment.

But then we are just like the ducks; our oil-driven agribusiness is the white bread. When the oil goes… most of us go. I wonder if we will live to see it?

All portions of this anecdote are made possible by ducks, and oil. The ducks are of course important. We drove to the park. I drove over the soccer mom’s dog. The bread was made with fertilizer, gas-burning tractors, and transported by truck.

It’s a strong interdependence.