It's an oddly pregnant phrase I encountered while wading lip-deep into the murky torrent of information and sewage that surrounds the network neutrality controversy. "Lip-deep" is a manner of speaking by means of which I mean to communicate the desire to have said nothing while fairly-relentlessly reading to learn how to sift the sense from bilateral propaganda; decks awash with foul-smelling water...building on the intriguing premise that information in this new age is better-envisioned as a fl…
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Posted on July 12th, 2008 at 8:00pm —
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Having found John Cusack's blog at Huffington Post, I entered the theater this afternoon expecting to find similarities between this film and
Iron Man. The baseline pitch for both films is reasonably similar; an engaging young American man finds himself in a fictitious, wartorn, MiddleEastern nation and Finds himself disaffected from his ongoing affiliations; inevitably changing sides from worse to better.
While that synopsis says little-or-nothing about either film, I have to add that…
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Posted on June 14th, 2008 at 7:00pm —
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8½ months from now, we're told, analog broadcast television in these United States ceases.
A month ago I geared up in anticipation of the 2/18/2009 digital transition, even though I use my tv (mostly) as an alarm clock in the morning and a sleeping pill at night.
Having acquired both my set and vcr in 2001, neither is equipped with a digital tuner, so a set-top box was necessary, and a digital antenna turned out to be mandatory. RadioShack provided both for $60 for each, and I installed them bot…
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Posted on June 4th, 2008 at 8:30am —
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I
very much enjoyed this "simple" tale of one man's redemption, in which the pampered product of fabulous wealth and advantage finds himself to be contemptible while he gazes into the bottomless heart of darkness and he recognizes the significance of his own contribution to the evil that men do. Then rededicates his life to reversing the mischief.
The thumbnail of the film leads the audience to anticipate yet another modernist celebration of technological progress, and there is
no… Continue
Posted on May 19th, 2008 at 8:00am —
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If, as Harlequin Ellison says,
"The two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen...and stupidity.",
then we'd best get busier building out the internet, (sorry, Harlan.) because the human race is finally capable of soldering together a simulated brain that incorporates every scrap of human, cortical intelligence that squats in isolation on the surface of a planet that squats in its (one-of-a-kind-)snowflake isolation, gradually melting in a sea of hydrogenated stupidity.
The purpose of…
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Posted on May 3rd, 2008 at 8:30am —
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A Tree of Peace, a Great Peace, a great law. It's a spiritual law. He said, `When you become afraid or when you become weak or when you become not able to carry,' he says, `it's the spiritual law that will stiffen your spine.' He said, `That's where your strength is. So you must make your laws in accordance with those spiritual laws and then you will survive.'
He called that council the Council of the Good Minds. He said the Hoyanni -- that's what it means, the all-good, the good, peacemakers. So that's what he set up. And when he uprooted this great tree and he asked the Nations to come forward and cast their weapons of war, he says, `We now do away with the warriors and we do away with the war chiefs. And in their place we plant the Council of the Good Minds who will now counsel for the welfare of the people.' And he said, `I shall not leave you defenseless.' And he gave us a spiritual strength, Oyenkwaohweh, the Great Tobacco. He said, `This will be your medium for communication, directly.'