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28 April 2007 by nathaniel

High Crimes + Misdemeanors: A.R.T. Hits Congress

via Joy at NewsGrist, who got it via email:

Yoursilence_v2_mail1_2 Articleii_v2_mail1

via email:
WASHINGTON, D.C.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
HIGH CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS – WE WILL NOT BE SILENT

Multiple actions occurred in the early afternoon today inside the Hart Senate Office Building. Eight New York
activists were among the 15 plus arrested.

TODAY, APRIL 26, 2007, A.R.T.* OCCUPIED THE HALLS OF CONGRESS IN A DRAMATIC TWO-PART ACTION.

First, in a massive distribution, A.R.T. hand-delivered a 20-page tabloid petition to every representative. It contained documentary evidence for indictments, literally putting impeachment back on the table.

Then, at 1PM, in a spectacular visual feat, A.R.T displayed the full text of Article II, Section 4 to the Senate as a 30-foot banner drop in the Hart Office Building atrium. A second 30-foot banner read “YOUR SILENCE YOUR LEGACY”. Organizers said, “We must magnify the refusal of Congress to uphold the Constitution. Their silence equals complicity in the flagrant crimes of this administration.”

Contact: *A.R.T. (Activist Response Team)
email: stateofemergencyaction@gmail.com

Posted in art, news and politics, re-blog tidbits ·

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25 April 2007 by nathaniel

iCommons Summit 07 — help us increase the number of scholarships

via Lessig Blog (they do artist residencies, too!):

iCommons Summit 07 – help us increase the number of scholarships

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iCommons is an entity Creative Commons helped incubate. Its purpose is to enable a platform for commons-related projects from around the world to interact — including A2K, Wikipedia, Free Software, Free Culture Movement and Creative Commons.One core project of iCommons is an annual summit. The first year was Boston. Last year was Rio. This year is Dubrovnik.

Tomorrow, CC will be launching a special fund-raising drive to raise money to sponsor scholarships to the Summit. Click here to help.

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, Links, me, news and politics, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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26 February 2007 by nathaniel

Of course America is ready for a black president. Are you?

In the guise of a seer who has some sort of zeitgeist on the times, many cynics (mostly liberal ones, often people of color) keep posing the question, “Is America ready for a black President?” (Or just answer “no” when asked.)

I’ll Answer that one: of course we are.

Look at the polls.  And a lot of these people are answering no, even tho they would vote for a black candidate (they just think everyone else is beneath them, less evolved, wouldn’t do so). Yes, there are some who won’t vote for a black man as the Commander in Chief, and there are some who may vote for him (implicit “him”: Barack) for no other reason. And these numbers may or may not cancel each other out (especially given that we need to consider who might be mobilized to vote in such an election).

But I have bigger issue with the question itself, given what it might lead to in my own party (er, the party I’m currently registered for). Voting for “who we think can win” in the Democratic primaries led to the last boring candidate. We need a leader. Someone who had vision on Iraq from day 1, can bring people of faith back to the party they belong in, wants us to end poverty and bring Universal Health instead of just making the rich richer. Do you really think that someone who would vote for Rudy or McJohn over Barack, for issues of race (consciously or unconsciously), would vote for Hillary or JohnE instead? That’s just silly.

If we don’t get Obama for president, it’s not cuz America is not ready, it’s because the Democrats aren’t – the primaries will decide, not the general election. I’m more and more impressed with this man every single day (that link on Iraq above, his foresight – wow. And please also take a look at his announcement speech…). Take him seriously – and do not discount him with a pretense of knowing superiority; you do yourself, and America, a disservice.

Posted in Links, news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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11 February 2007 by nathaniel

obama

History could be being made in so many ways. It doesn’t work on an Intel Mac (please let me know if you find a QuickTime or YouTube version), but (Works now): it’s one of the best contemporary political speeches I’ve heard (up there with Nader at Cooper Union, Gore on MLK day and just about every time I hear Feingold speak). Click the image below, then click the one that says “Presidential Campaign”…

http://www.barackobama.com

PS Just settling back into Dubs, trying to get some stuff done, working on a few proposals, etc.

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus ·

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20 November 2006 by sean slemon

I could not resist:


Photo: Tom Hanson/Canadian Press, via Associated Press, New York Times
This image was just too hilarious not to post: President Bush and other leaders today at the Asian economic summit meeting in Vietnam, where U.S. officials talked of a new set of incentives for North Korea to give up its nuclear program.
There have also been serious protests at Bush’s presence in Vietnam.
I will hold myself back from deconstructing this image!

Posted in art, news and politics, re-blog tidbits, sean slemon ·

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19 October 2006 by nathaniel

Teaching Humanity

My wife handed me this article by Martha Nussbaum in the newsweek a while back, and it’s been sitting on my desk waiting to be read since then. I went for a walk with my daughter swinging in her sling across my chest this morning, reading it as I sang her to sleep, and was enthralled by its simplicity and clarity on that which seems so ingrained in me, misunderstood and underused by education systems and mass media world wide. If you don’t have time to read the whole article, I ask you to read the following (last) paragraph TWICE. Once, as is – accenting the importance of liberal arts education – and a second time, replacing the word “education” with “news media” – for shits and giggles…

Democracies have great rational and imaginative powers. Yet they also are prone to irrationality, parochialism, haste, sloppiness and selfishness. Education based mainly on profitability in the global market magnifies these deficiencies–to the point that they threaten the very life of democracy itself. We need to favor an education that cultivates the critical capacities, that fosters a complex understanding of the world and its peoples and that educates and refines the capacity for sympathy. In short, an education that cultivates human beings rather than producing useful machines. If we do not insist on the crucial importance of the humanities and the arts, they will drop away. They don’t make money. But they do something far more precious: they make a world worth living in.

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·
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