OaD, The Once a Day Blog once a day blog :: April :: 2006

By Jórge, OptimismApril 30, 2006 7:25 pm

good news & bad news in 1 concise headline

Some random Google News search results for “good news”
AIDS cases on the wane?

ALMOST exactly 25 years after it was recognised, there is some solid good news about the Aids virus: the rate of new infections has passed its global peak and an epidemic which has claimed 25m lives so far is finally on the wane. As world attention belatedly focuses on the Africans living with the virus, another part of the story has been missed: a series of recent studies shows the prevalence of Aids was overstated – and that its incidence is now falling.

Chinese boobs waxing

The chest circumference of Chinese women increased by nearly 1cm in the past 10 years, the Beijing College of Clothing Technology said in a recent report that studied changes in figure for Chinese women in the past decade, China News Service reported.

South African Large Telescope unveiled (5 months ago)

The SALT is the “largest optical telescope in the southern hemisphere” and – as the Post reported – will allow us to see 13 billion years back in time. It was built by an international consortium of universities and government agencies lead by the National Research Foundation of South Africa. And, its intergalactic window to the night skies of this hemisphere should inspire pilgrimages to South Africa by star gazers and star trekkers from all over the world to experience unprecedented forays back and forth throughout space and time.

Yucaipa, California is in good fiscal shape

The city is in very good shape financially and the prospect in the foreseeable future is encouraging. City Manager John Tooker noted that Yucaipa continues to operate in the black, with an “undesignated funds” balance of over $7 million, even after taking more than $6 million from this fund to finance the Live Oak/Oak Glen interchange project.

Steven Tyler’s voice will be OK for fall concerts

Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler has come clean about his health. The band had to cancel about three weeks’ worth of dates this spring because Tyler was ill, and in an e-mail exchange with rollingstone.com, he admitted that his doctors “zapped a broken blood vessel in my voice box and it’s healed.”

…and a million more stories about sports figures being able to play in the big game, celebrities having babies, and various and sundry business deals closing. Not impressed? Try some of these for your good news fix:

Happy News
Global Good News
Good News Network
Good News Agency
Positive News
UpBeat

By Rib Roche, Will Someone Please Think of the Children 12:54 pm

gangbanger

This one’s for my boys in the Boroughs.

Between 2003 and 2005, 1,662 murders were committed in New York. Men and boys were responsible for 93 percent of the murders; their victims tended to be other men and boys; and in more than half the cases, the killer and victim knew each other.

In addition, an interesting, though uncommon, group of murders involved a handful of victims who died of injuries one or more years after being stabbed, shot, beaten or burned and were counted as murder victims in the year in which they died. Click on the map to view all of the homicides by borough.

By Slingshot, OptimismApril 27, 2006 7:59 pm

I am constantly in awe these days, as new discoveries make the headlines. When I expressed interest in becoming a palentologist in elementary school, I was told that everything ad pretty much been discovered and by the time I was old enough, palentologists wouldn’t have jobs. Well thanks again, public education! I can, however, keep up with the latest discoveries and continue being amazed by this complex, and deeply shrouded world.

Here are some of the latest discoveries I’ve heard about, that are changing our history:

The Bosnian Pyramid of the Sun
A new Blog has been created to update people on the progress of the pyramid excavation.  lost pyramid

The Pyramid under Mexico City
This one was just discovered!Mexico City Pyramid

The Human Geneome Project
Find out where you came from and when your cousins stopped kissing

Darwin’s Missing Link?


Missing Link Sleleton Found
turning into a boodaddy

By Lucy, NicaraguaApril 26, 2006 6:00 pm

Don’t worry, next week will include current news and commentary. I’m just laying down some background.

William Walker

A couple of months ago I sitting on the Witness for Peace porch in Managua Nicaragua learning about US involvement in the country for the last 150 years or so. The first event we covered was when a US citizen, William Walker (pictured above), led a group of mercenaries into Nicaragua and took over the country. Remember from two weeks ago, the State Department said,

Initially invited by the Liberals in 1855 to join their struggle against the Conservatives, an American named William Walker and his “filibusters” seized the presidency in 1856. The Liberals and Conservatives united to drive him out of office in 1857.

Just a side note, the US government at the time recognized his presidency as legitamate. This is something I’ve been noticing lately, when the US recognizes governments.

Aside from wanting to be supreme ruler, we were told that this guy was in a race against the Vanderbuilts to establish a canal through Central America. At this time, lots of people were trying to establish a water route from the East Coast of the US to the West Coast. Here’s a map of the US at this time, the pink indicates “settled territory”:

US 1850

Notice the big gap in the middle.

So after William Walker, the history of the US and Nicaragua grow together because of the US marines and US businesses. The US businesses set up what become known as “Bannana Republics”, and the US marines are continually sent in to keep Nicaraguans from running their own country (more or less). Of course, “uprisings” and “US interests” were continually brought up as reasons to invade, er, I mean, keep the peace.

As I grew more angy with every piece of US meddlement in Nicaragua, I kept thinking, “we should get the fuck out and stay out and let them have their country back.” And then I realized exactly how similar US history and Nicaragua history is, and how foggy my role as a US citizen is.

The reason that the area in the middle of the map of the US above isn’t settled is the same reason why US citizens were invading Central American Countries to create a water passage from coast to coast. The people who lived in that “unsettled” place in the US didn’t want the white man invading their territories and displacing them. In fact, the Indigenous people who lived there fought off the white man so well, many of them decided to look for a way “around” them. Hence, the search for the central american canal.

So as the US was invading Nicaragua and setting up their own governments abroad, they were doing the exact same thing on their “own” soil. Invading the people who lived in what is now the US, and setting up more favorable governments, with total disregard for the people who actually lived there.

And as US presence in Nicaragua today infuriates me, shouldn’t US presence on US land itself, Turtle Island, also infuriate me? Cause it kinda is starting to. Anyone Else?

By JórgeApril 24, 2006 9:55 pm

Bill's B-day

Thank you, thank you. Though I hope that I don’t meet the same curious fate as our boy Bill, dying on his birthday and all. Johnny P. may also care to know that I was born on the very same day as Andruw Jones, the Atlanta Braves star who incidentally hails from the Netherlands. Your Cliff Clavin fact of the day.

Here’s what the Birthday Calculator had to say about me yesterday.

There are 364 days till your next birthday
on which your cake will have 30 candles.

Those 30 candles produce 30 BTUs,
or 7,560 calories of heat (that’s only 7.5600 food Calories!) .
You can boil 3.43 US ounces of water with that many candles.

Maybe I’ll make some instant oatmeal or something.
Try it, it’s fun.

By Slingshot, By Lucy, By Rib Roche, By Johnny Palmetto, By Arepamonger, By Uncle BoodaddyApril 23, 2006 12:20 pm

Happy Birthday from your fellow Once-a-Dayers…

By Slingshot, OptimismApril 20, 2006 12:41 pm

What happens when you don't buy local? You End up looking like a 3-pronged Boodaddy!

By Wendell Berry Uncle Wendell

LET US BEGIN BY ASSUMING what appears to be true: that the so-called “environmental crisis” is now pretty well established as a fact of our age. The problems of pollution, species extinction, loss of wilderness, loss of farmland, loss of topsoil may still be ignored or scoffed at, but they are not denied. Concern for these problems has acquired a certain standing, a measure of discussability, in the media and in some scientific, academic, and religious institutions.
This is good, of course; obviously, we can¹t hope to solve these problems without an increase of public awareness and concern. But in an age burdened with “publicity,” we have to be aware also that as issues rise into popularity they rise also into the danger of oversimplification. To speak of this danger is especially necessary in confronting the destructiveness of our relationship to nature, which is the result, in the Þrst place, of gross oversimplification.

The “environmental crisis” has happened because the human household or economy is in conflict at almost every point with the household of nature. We have built our household on the assumption that the natural household is simple and can be simply used. We have assumed increasingly over the last five hundred years that nature is merely a supply of “raw materials,” and that we may safely possess those materials merely by taking them. This taking, as our technical means have increased, has involved always less reverence or respect, less gratitude, less local knowledge, and less skill. Our methodologies of land use have strayed from our old sympathetic attempts to imitate natural processes, and have come more and more to resemble the methodology of mining, even as mining itself has become more technologically powerful and more brutal.

And so we will be wrong if we attempt to correct what we perceive as “environmental” problems without correcting the economic oversimplification that caused them. This oversimplification is now either a matter of corporate behavior or of behavior under the influence of corporate behavior. This is sufficiently clear to many of us. What is not sufficiently clear, perhaps to any of us, is the extent of our complicity, as individuals and especially as individual consumers, in the behavior of the corporations.

What has happened is that most people in our country, and apparently most people in the “developed” world, have given proxies to the corporations to produce and provide all of their food, clothing, and shelter. Moreover, they are rapidly giving proxies to corporations or governments to provide entertainment, education, child care, care of the sick and the elderly, and many other kinds of “service” that once were carried on informally and inexpensively by individuals or households or communities. Our major economic practice, in short, is to delegate the practice to others.


A corporation, essentially, is a pile
of money to which a number of persons have sold their moral allegiance.

The danger now is that those who are concerned will believe that the solution to the “environmental crisis” can be merely political - that the problems, being large, can be solved by large solutions generated by a few people to whom we will give our proxies to police the economic proxies that we have already given. The danger, in other words, is that people will think they have made a sufficient change if they have altered their “values,” or had a “change of heart,” or experienced a “spiritual awakening,” and that such a change in passive consumers will cause appropriate changes in the public experts, politicians, and corporate executives to whom they have granted their political and economic proxies.

The trouble with this is that a proper concern for nature and our use of nature must be practiced not by our proxy-holders, but by ourselves. A change of heart or of values without a practice is only another pointless luxury of a passively consumptive way of life. The “environmental crisis,” in fact, can be solved only if people, individually and in their communities, recover responsibility for their thoughtlessly given proxies. If people begin the effort to take back into their own power a significant portion of their economic responsibility, then their inevitable first discovery is that the “environmental crisis” is no such thing; it is not a crisis of our environs or surroundings; it is a crisis of our lives as individuals, as family members, as community members, and as citizens. We have an “environmental crisis” because we have consented to an economy in which by eating, drinking, working, resting, traveling, and enjoying ourselves we are destroying the natural, the god-given world.

WE LIVE, AS WE MUST SOONER or later recognize, in an era of sentimental economics and, consequently, of sentimental politics. Sentimental communism holds in effect that everybody and everything should suffer for the good of “the many” who, though miserable in the present, will be happy in the future for exactly the same reasons that they are miserable in the present.

Sentimental capitalism is not so different from sentimental communism as the corporate and political powers claim. Sentimental capitalism holds in effect that everything small, local, private, personal, natural, good, and beautiful must be sacrificed in the interest of the “free market” and the great corporations, which will bring unprecedented security and happiness to “the many” - in, of course, the future.

These forms of political economy may be described as sentimental because they depend absolutely upon a political faith for which there is no justification, and because they issue a cold check on the virtue of political and/or economic rulers. They seek, that is, to preserve the gullibility of the people by appealing to a fund of political virtue that does not exist. Communism and “free-market” capitalism both are modern versions of oligarchy. In their propaganda, both justify violent means by good ends, which always are put beyond reach by the violence of the means. The trick is to define the end vaguely - “the greatest good of the greatest number” or “the benefit of the many” - and keep it at a distance.

The fraudulence of these oligarchic forms of economy is in their principle of displacing whatever good they recognize (as well as their debts) from the present to the future. Their success depends upon persuading people, first, that whatever they have now is no good, and second, that the promised good is certain to be achieved in the future. This obviously contradicts the principle - common, I believe, to all the religious traditions - that if ever we are going to do good to one another, then the time to do it is now; we are to receive no reward for promising to do it in the future. And both communism and capitalism have found such principles to be a great embarrassment. If you are presently occupied in destroying every good thing in sight in order to do good in the future, it is inconvenient to have people saying things like “Love thy neighbor as thyself” or “Sentient beings are numberless, I vow to save them.” Communists and capitalists alike, “liberal” and “conservative” capitalists alike, have needed to replace religion with some form of determinism, so that they can say to their victims, “I am doing this because I can¹t do otherwise. It is not my fault. It is inevitable.” The wonder is how often organized religion has gone along with this lie.

The idea of an economy based upon several kinds of ruin may seem a contradiction in terms, but in fact such an economy is possible, as we see. It is possible however, on one implacable condition: the only future good that it assuredly leads to is that it will destroy itself. And how does it disguise this outcome from its subjects, its short-term beneficiaries, and its victims? It does so by false accounting. It substitutes for the real economy, by which we build and maintain (or do not maintain) our household, a symbolic economy of money, which in the long run, because of the self-interested manipulations of the “controlling interests,” cannot symbolize or account for anything but itself. And so we have before us the spectacle of unprecedented “prosperity” and “economic growth” in a land of degraded farms, forests, ecosystems, and watersheds, polluted air, failing families, and perishing communities.

THIS MORAL AND ECONOMIC ABSURDITY exists for the sake of the allegedly “free” market, the single principle of which is this: commodities will be produced wherever they can be produced at the lowest cost, and consumed wherever they will bring the highest price. To make too cheap and sell too high has always been the program of industrial capitalism. The idea of the global “free market” is merely capitalism¹s so-far-successful attempt to enlarge the geographic scope of its greed, and moreover to give to its greed the status of a “right” within its presumptive territory. The global “free market” is free to the corporations precisely because it dissolves the boundaries of the old national colonialisms, and replaces them with a new colonialism without restraints or boundaries. It is pretty much as if all the rabbits have now been forbidden to have holes, thereby “freeing” the hounds.

A corporation, essentially, is a pile
of money to which a number of persons have sold their moral allegiance.

The “right” of a corporation to exercise its economic power without restraint is construed, by the partisans of the “free market,” as a form of freedom, a political liberty implied presumably by the right of individual citizens to own and use property.

But the “free market” idea introduces into government a sanction of an inequality that is not implicit in any idea of democratic liberty: namely that the “free market” is freest to those who have the most money, and is not free at all to those with little or no money. Wal-Mart, for example, as a large corporation “freely” competing against local, privately owned businesses has virtually all the freedom, and its small competitors virtually none.

To make too cheap and sell too high, there are two requirements. One is that you must have a lot of consumers with surplus money and unlimited wants. For the time being, there are plenty of these consumers in the “developed” countries. The problem, for the time being easily solved, is simply to keep them relatively affluent and dependent on purchased supplies.

The other requirement is that the market for labor and raw materials should remain depressed relative to the market for retail commodities. This means that the supply of workers should exceed demand, and that the land-using economy should be allowed or encouraged to overproduce.

To keep the cost of labor low, it is necessary first to entice or force country people everywhere in the world to move into the cities - in the manner prescribed by the United States’ Committee for Economic Development after World War II - and second, to continue to introduce labor-replacing technology. In this way it is possible to maintain a “pool” of people who are in the threatening position of being mere consumers, landless and also poor, and who therefore are eager to go to work for low wages - precisely the condition of migrant farm workers in the United States.

To cause the land-using economies to overproduce is even simpler. The farmers and other workers in the world’s land-using economies, by and large, are not organized. They are therefore unable to control production in order to secure just prices. Individual producers must go individually to the market and take for their produce simply whatever they are paid. They have no power to bargain or make demands. Increasingly, they must sell, not to neighbors or to neighboring towns and cities, but to large and remote corporations. There is no competition among the buyers (supposing there is more than one), who are organized, and are “free” to exploit the advantage of low prices. Low prices encourage overproduction as producers attempt to make up their losses “on volume,” and overproduction inevitably makes for low prices. The land-using economies thus spiral downward as the money economy of the exploiters spirals upward. If economic attrition in the land-using population becomes so severe as to threaten production, then governments can subsidize production without production controls, which necessarily will encourage overproduction, which will lower prices - and so the subsidy to rural producers becomes, in effect, a subsidy to the purchasing corporations. In the land-using economies production is further cheapened by destroying, with low prices and low standards of quality, the cultural imperatives for good work and land stewardship.

THIS SORT OF EXPLOITATION, long familiar in the foreign and domestic economies and the colonialism of modern nations, has now become “the global economy,” which is the property of a few supranational corporations. The economic theory used to justify the global economy in its “free market” version is again perfectly groundless and sentimental. The idea is that what is good for the corporations will sooner or later - though not of course immediately - be good for everybody.

That sentimentality is based in turn, upon a fantasy: the proposition that the great corporations, in “freely” competing with one another for raw materials, labor, and marketshare, will drive each other indefinitely, not only toward greater “efficiencies” of manufacture, but also toward higher bids for raw materials and labor and lower prices to consumers. As a result, all the world¹s people will be economically secure - in the future. It would be hard to object to such a proposition if only it were true.

But one knows, in the first place, that “efficiency” in manufacture always means reducing labor costs by replacing workers with cheaper workers or with machines.

In the second place, the “law of competition” does not imply that many competitors will compete indefinitely. The law of competition is a simple paradox: Competition destroys competition. The law of competition implies that many competitors, competing on the “free market” will ultimately and inevitably reduce the number of competitors to one. The law of competition, in short, is the law of war.

In the third place, the global economy is based upon cheap long-distance transportation, without which it is not possible to move goods from the point of cheapest origin to the point of highest sale. And cheap long-distance transportation is the basis of the idea that regions and nations should abandon any measure of economic self-sufficiency in order to specialize in production for export of the few commodities or the single commodity that can be most cheaply produced. Whatever may be said for the “efficiency” of such a system, its result (and I assume, its purpose) is to destroy local production capacities, local diversity, and local economic independence.

This idea of a global “free market” economy, despite its obvious moral flaws and its dangerous practical weaknesses, is now the ruling orthodoxy of the age. Its propaganda is subscribed to and distributed by most political leaders, editorial writers, and other “opinion makers.” The powers that be, while continuing to budget huge sums for “national defense,” have apparently abandoned any idea of national or local self-sufficiency, even in food. They also have given up the idea that a national or local government might justly place restraints upon economic activity in order to protect its land and its people.

The global economy is now institutionalized in the World Trade Organization, which was set up, without election anywhere, to rule international trade on behalf of the “free market” - which is to say on behalf of the supranational corporations - and to overrule, in secret sessions, any national or regional law that conflicts with the “free market.” The corporate program of global free trade and the presence of the World Trade Organization have legitimized extreme forms of expert thought. We are told confidently that if Kentucky loses its milk-producing capacity to Wisconsin, that will be a “success story.” Experts such as Stephen C. Blank, of the University of California, Davis, have proposed that “developed” countries, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, where food can no longer be produced cheaply enough, should give up agriculture altogether.

The folly at the root of this foolish economy began with the idea that a corporation should be regarded, legally, as “a person.” But the limitless destructiveness of this economy comes about precisely because a corporation is not a person. A corporation, essentially, is a pile of money to which a number of persons have sold their moral allegiance. As such, unlike a person, a corporation does not age. It does not arrive, as most persons finally do, at a realization of the shortness and smallness of human lives; it does not come to see the future as the lifetime of the children and grandchildren of anybody in particular. It can experience no personal hope or remorse, no change of heart. It cannot humble itself. It goes about its business as if it were immortal, with the single purpose of becoming a bigger pile of money. The stockholders essentially are usurers, people who “let their money work for them,” expecting high pay in return for causing others to work for low pay. The World Trade Organization enlarges the old idea of the corporation-as-person by giving the global corporate economy the status of a super government with the power to overrule nations. I don¹t mean to say, of course, that all corporate executives and stockholders are bad people. I am only saying that all of them are very seriously implicated in a bad economy.


UNSURPRISINGLY, AMONG PEOPLE WHO WISH
to preserve things other than money - for instance, every region’s native capacity to produce essential goods - there is a growing perception that the global “free market” economy is inherently an enemy to the natural world, to human health and freedom, to industrial workers, and to farmers and others in the land-use economies; and furthermore, that it is inherently an enemy to good work and good economic practice. I believe that this perception is correct and that it can be shown to be correct merely by listing the assumptions implicit in the idea that corporations should be “free” to buy low and sell high in the world at large. These assumptions, so far as I can make them out, are as follows:
1. That stable and preserving relationships among people, places, and things do not matter and are of no worth.
2. That cultures and religions have no legitimate practical or economic concerns.
3. That there is no conflict between the “free market” and political freedom, and no connection between political democracy and economic democracy.
4. That there can be no conflict between economic advantage and economic justice.
5. That there is no conflict between greed and ecological or bodily health.
6. That there is no conflict between self-interest and public service.
7. That the loss or destruction of the capacity anywhere to produce necessary goods does not matter and involves no cost.
8. That it is all right for a nation’s or a region’s subsistence to be foreign based, dependent on long-distance transport, and entirely controlled by corporations.
9. That, therefore, wars over commodities - our recent Gulf War, for example - are legitimate and permanent economic functions.
10. That this sort of sanctioned violence is justified also by the predominance of centralized systems of production supply, communications, and transportation, which are extremely vulnerable not only to acts of war between nations, but also to sabotage and terrorism.
11. That it is all right for poor people in poor countries to work at poor wages to produce goods for export to affluent people in rich countries.
12. That there is no danger and no cost in the proliferation of exotic pests, weeds, and diseases that accompany international trade and that increase with the volume of trade.
13. That an economy is a machine, of which people are merely the interchangeable parts. One has no choice but to do the work (if any) that the economy prescribes, and to accept the prescribed wage.
14. That, therefore, vocation is a dead issue. One does not do the work that one chooses to do because one is called to it by Heaven or by one’s natural or god-given abilities, but does instead the work that is determined and imposed by the economy. Any work is all right as long as one gets paid for it.

These assumptions clearly prefigure a condition of total economy. A total economy is one in which everything - “life forms,” for instance, or the “right to pollute” - is “private property” and has a price and is for sale. In a total economy significant and sometimes critical choices that once belonged to individuals or communities become the property of corporations. A total economy, operating internationally, necessarily shrinks the powers of state and national governments, not only because those governments have signed over significant powers to an international bureaucracy or because political leaders become the paid hacks of the corporations but also because political processes - and especially democratic processes - are too slow to react to unrestrained economic and technological development on a global scale. And when state and national governments begin to act in effect as agents of the global economy, selling their people for low wages and their people’s products for low prices, then the rights and liberties of citizenship must necessarily shrink. A total economy is an unrestrained taking of profits from the disintegration of nations, communities, households, landscapes, and ecosystems. It licenses symbolic or artificial wealth to “grow” by means of the destruction of the real wealth of all the world.

Among the many costs of the total economy, the loss of the principle of vocation is probably the most symptomatic and, from a cultural standpoint, the most critical. It is by the replacement of vocation with economic determinism that the exterior workings of a total economy destroy the character and culture also from the inside.

In an essay on the origin of civilization in traditional cultures, Ananda K. Coomaraswamy wrote that “the principle of justice is the same throughout…[it is] that each member of the community should perform the task for which he is fitted by nature…” The two ideas, justice and vocation, are inseparable. That is why Coomaraswamy spoke of industrialism as “the mammon of injustice,” incompatible with civilization. It is by way of the principle and practice of vocation that sanctity and reverence enter into the human economy. It was thus possible for traditional cultures to conceive that “to work is to pray.”

AWARE OF INDUSTRIALISM’S potential for destruction, as well as the considerable political danger of great concentrations of wealth and power in industrial corporations, American leaders developed, and for a while used, the means of limiting and restraining such concentrations, and of somewhat equitably distributing wealth and property. The means were: laws against trusts and monopolies, the principle of collective bargaining, the concept of one-hundred-percent parity between the land-using and the manufacturing economies, and the progressive income

A viable neighborhood is a community; and a viable community is made up of neighbors who cherish and protect what they have in common.

tax. And to protect domestic producers and production capacities it is possible for governments to impose tariffs on cheap imported goods. These means are justified by the government’s obligation to protect the lives, livelihoods, and freedoms of its citizens. There is, then, no necessity or inevitability requiring our government to sacrifice the livelihoods of our small farmers, small business people, and workers, along with our domestic economic independence to the global “free market.” But now all of these means are either weakened or in disuse. The global economy is intended as a means of subverting them.

In default of government protections against the total economy of the supranational corporations, people are where they have been many times before: in danger of losing their economic security and their freedom, both at once. But at the same time the means of defending themselves belongs to them in the form of a venerable principle: powers not exercised by government return to the people. If the government does not propose to protect the lives, livelihoods, and freedoms of its people, then the people must think about protecting themselves.

How are they to protect themselves? There seems, really, to be only one way, and that is to develop and put into practice the idea of a local economy - something that growing numbers of people are now doing. For several good reasons, they are beginning with the idea of a local food economy. People are trying to find ways to shorten the distance between producers and consumers, to make the connections between the two more direct, and to make this local economic activity a benefit to the local community. They are trying to learn to use the consumer economies of local towns and cities to preserve the livelihoods of local farm families and farm communities. They want to use the local economy to give consumers an influence over the kind and quality of their food, and to preserve and enhance the local landscapes. They want to give everybody in the local community a direct, long-term interest in the prosperity, health, and beauty of their homeland. This is the only way presently available to make the total economy less total. It was once, I believe, the only way to make a national or a colonial economy less total. But now the necessity is greater.

I am assuming that there is a valid line of thought leading from the idea of the total economy to the idea of a local economy. I assume that the first thought may be a recognition of one’s ignorance and vulnerability as a consumer in the total economy. As such a consumer, one does not know the history of the products that one uses. Where, exactly, did they come from? Who produced them? What toxins were used in their production? What were the human and ecological costs of producing them and then of disposing of them? One sees that such questions cannot be answered easily, and perhaps not at all. Though one is shopping amid an astonishing variety of products, one is denied certain significant choices. In such a state of economic ignorance it is not possible to choose products that were produced locally or with reasonable kindness toward people and toward nature. Nor is it possible for such consumers to influence production for the better. Consumers who feel a prompting toward land stewardship find that in this economy they can have no stewardly practice. To be a consumer in the total economy, one must agree to be totally ignorant, totally passive, and totally dependent on distant supplies and self-interested suppliers.

And then, perhaps, one begins to see from a local point of view. One begins to ask, What is here, what is in me, that can lead to something better? From a local point of view, one can see that a global “free market” economy is possible only if nations and localities accept or ignore the inherent instability of a production economy based on exports and a consumer economy based on imports. An export economy is beyond local influence, and so is an import economy. And cheap long-distance transport is possible only if granted cheap fuel, international peace, control of terrorism, prevention of sabotage, and the solvency of the international economy.

Perhaps one also begins to see the difference between a small local business that must share the fate of the local community and a large absentee corporation that is set up to escape the fate of the local community by ruining the local community.

SO FAR AS I CAN SEE, the idea of a local economy rests upon only two principles: neighborhood and subsistence. In a viable neighborhood, neighbors ask themselves what they can do or provide for one another, and they find answers that they and their place can afford. This, and nothing else, is the practice of neighborhood. This practice must be, in part, charitable, but it must also be economic, and the economic part must be equitable; there is a significant charity in just prices.

Of course, everything needed locally cannot be produced locally. But a viable neighborhood is a community; and a viable community is made up of neighbors who cherish and protect what they have in common. This is the principle of subsistence. A viable community, like a viable farm, protects its own production capacities. It does not import products that it can produce for itself. And it does not export local products until local needs have been met. The economic products of a viable community are understood either as belonging to the community’s subsistence or as surplus, and only the surplus is considered to be marketable abroad. A community, if it is to be viable, cannot think of producing solely for export, and it cannot permit importers to use cheaper labor and goods from other places to destroy the local capacity to produce goods that are needed locally. In charity, moreover, it must refuse to import goods that are produced at the cost of human or ecological degradation elsewhere. This principle applies not just to localities, but to regions and nations as well.

The principles of neighborhood and subsistence will be disparaged by the globalists as “protectionism” - and that is exactly what it is. It is a protectionism that is just and sound, because it protects local producers and is the best assurance of adequate supplies to local consumers. And the idea that local needs should be met first and only surpluses exported does not imply any prejudice against charity toward people in other places or trade with them. The principle of neighborhood at home always implies the principle of charity abroad. And the principle of subsistence is in fact the best guarantee of giveable or marketable surpluses. This kind of protection is not “isolationism.”

Albert Schweitzer, who knew well the economic situation in the colonies of Africa, wrote nearly sixty years ago: “Whenever the timber trade is good, permanent famine reigns in the Ogowe region because the villagers abandon their farms to fell as many trees as possible.” We should notice especially that the goal of production was “as many…as possible.” And Schweitzer makes my point exactly: “These people could achieve true wealth if they could develop their agriculture and trade to meet their own needs.” Instead they produced timber for export to “the world economy,” which made them dependent upon imported goods that they bought with money earned from their exports. They gave up their local means of subsistence, and imposed the false standard of a foreign demand (”as many trees as possible”) upon their forests. They thus became helplessly dependent on an economy over which they had no control.

Such was the fate of the native people under the African colonialism of Schweitzer¹s time. Such is, and can only be, the fate of everybody under the global colonialism of our time. Schweitzer’s description of the colonial economy of the Ogowe region is in principle not different from the rural economy now in Kentucky or Iowa or Wyoming. A total economy for all practical purposes is a total government. The “free trade” which from the standpoint of the corporate economy brings “unprecedented economic growth,” from the standpoint of the land and its local populations, and ultimately from the standpoint of the cities, is destruction and slavery. Without prosperous local economies, the people have no power and the land no voice.
Wendell Berry

By Lucy, TechnologyApril 19, 2006 11:15 pm

Two interesting conferences/gatherings coming up on opposite ends of the US of A:

Hope 6

HOPE 6: July 21, 22, 23 2006
New York City, NY
Hotel Pennsylvania

“HOPE” stands for “Hackers On Planet Earth” and their conference is once every two years. I went to the last one with my wife and it was the best 50 bucks I ever spent. It all starts Friday evening and goes non-stop, 24-7 till Sunday night. With two main conference rooms and a third for spontaneous events, as well as workshops mixed in wherever there’s carpet space, this conference is a must for anyone interested in computers, phones, technology, and most other things too.

For something completely different:

Feral Visions

Feral Visions: August 4th - 13, 2006
Either in Arizona or New Mexico (site still being determined…)

Our goal is to help bring people into a wild environment, to break down mediation between oursleves and our world, and to encourage active participation with it. As in the past, the gathering will provide an introduction to the various strands of anti-civilization thought, as well as being an in-depth forum for discussing and developing theoretical and practical aspects of green anarchy.

By JórgeApril 16, 2006 9:10 pm

I actually had a very nice Easter this year. Did the traditionally blasphemous Pagan stuff, hunted for eggs, sacrificed a chocolate hen to my niece, and enjoyed a very nice meal outside in the beautiful Spring sushine.
But these would have definitely kicked it up a notch.

Resurrection Paddles

for the boys

Ah, maybe next year.

By Slingshot, Optimism, Humor, SexApril 13, 2006 5:04 pm

Maybe he'll start paying for her makeup!
Italy’s most famous porn star Cicciolina has offered herself to Osama Bin Laden.

The 55-year-old actress said it was about time somebody tackled the terrorist and claimed she could be just the woman for the job.

Speaking at an erotic fair in Bucharest, Romania, Cicciolina said: “It is time someone did something about Bin Laden, and I am ready to do it.

“I am ready to make a deal, he can have me in exchange for an end to his tyranny. My breasts have only ever helped people while Bin Laden has killed thousands of innocent victims.”

The blonde porn star, whose real name is Anna Ilona Staller, pointed out that Bin Laden could learn from Saddam Hussein’s mistakes.

In the 1990s she offered herself to Saddam Hussein if he gave up dictatorship of Iraq, and added that if he had taken up her offer “who knows what might have happened.”

thanks, ananova!

By Lucy, NicaraguaApril 12, 2006 9:14 pm

Here’s some homework for next week. Read the Department of State fact page on Nicaragua, paying closer attention on the History section.

here’s the link

Here’s a few sentences to ponder over the next week:

Initially invited by the Liberals in 1855 to join their struggle against the Conservatives, an American named William Walker and his “filibusters” seized the presidency in 1856. The Liberals and Conservatives united to drive him out of office in 1857.

From 1927 until 1933, U.S. Marines stationed in Nicaragua engaged in a running battle with rebel forces led by renegade Liberal Gen. Augusto Sandino, who rejected a 1927 negotiated agreement brokered by the United States to end the latest round of fighting between Liberals and Conservatives.

After the departure of U.S. troops, National Guard Cmdr. Anastasio Somoza Garcia outmaneuvered his political opponents–including Sandino, who was assassinated by National Guard officers–and took over the presidency in 1936. Somoza and two sons who succeeded him, maintained close ties with the United States.

The Reagan administration provided assistance to the Nicaraguan resistance and in 1985 imposed an embargo on U.S.-Nicaraguan trade.

By Slingshot, Optimism, Will Someone Please Think of the ChildrenApril 11, 2006 1:01 pm

I'd vote for him.. I think....
I know it’s not my day to post, but I thought I’d throw this one out there, as it looks like an bone crusher!

Link to trailer

By Jórge, PessimismApril 10, 2006 2:07 am

Via Tom Tomorrow, we get confirmation that BushCo & the Pentagon are warming up the ol’ strategery machine again, pointing it this time at Iran.

According to current and former officials, Pentagon and CIA planners have been exploring possible targets, such as the uranium enrichment plant at Natanz and the uranium conversion facility at Isfahan. Although a land invasion is not contemplated, military officers are weighing alternatives ranging from a limited airstrike aimed at key nuclear sites, to a more extensive bombing campaign designed to destroy an array of military and political targets.

Preparations for confrontation with Iran underscore how the issue has vaulted to the front of President Bush’s agenda even as he struggles with a relentless war in next-door Iraq. Bush views Tehran as a serious menace that must be dealt with before his presidency ends, aides said, and the White House, in its new National Security Strategy, last month labeled Iran the most serious challenge to the United States posed by any country.

The challenge, of course, revolves around Iran’s potential to produce and use nuclear weapons. The same kind of nuclear weapons that Israel and the United States are “contemplating” using to get to key targets.

Pentagon planners are studying how to penetrate eight-foot-deep targets and are contemplating tactical nuclear devices. The Natanz facility consists of more than two dozen buildings, including two huge underground halls built with six-foot walls and supposedly protected by two concrete roofs with sand and rocks in between, according to Edward N. Luttwak, a specialist at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“The targeteers honestly keep coming back and saying it will require nuclear penetrator munitions to take out those tunnels,” said Kenneth M. Pollack, a former CIA analyst. “Could we do it with conventional munitions? Possibly. But it’s going to be very difficult to do.”

What’s that saying about teaching people that killing people is wrong?

By Jórge, Will Someone Please Think of the ChildrenApril 9, 2006 11:32 pm

lunch money destinations

Congress, at long last, is turning its reactionary eye onto the vast amount of junk food widely available in American public schools. Bipartisan legislation has been introduced in the Senate to push the USDA into upping the standards it sets for what ends up on lunch trays and in vending machines.

Dangerous weight is on the rise in kids. This week, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the rate of obese and overweight kids has climbed to 18 percent of boys and 16 percent of girls. Four years ago, the number was 14 percent.

Lawmakers blame high-fat, high-sugar snacks that compete with nutritious meals in schools.

“Junk food sales in schools are out of control,” Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, senior Democrat on the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, said Thursday. “It undercuts our investment in school meal programs and steers kids toward a future of obesity and diet-related disease.”

Could this be the beginning of a national Upchuck Rebellion?

“…[A] big change is coming. With little fanfare, a grassroots ‘farm-to-cafeteria’ movement has been spreading from school to school. More than 400 school districts and 200 university cafeterias are now building their menus (and, in many places, their educational curricula) around fresh, local ingredients, much of which is organic. In nearly every case, the change has come because some parent, farmer, nutritionist, or other individual rose up to ask, ‘What the hell is going on here?’”

Check out the Farm to School website to learn more and see if you’re state is on board yet.

By Slingshot, Optimism, ConspiracyApril 7, 2006 6:18 pm

Judas' kiss of death
There is a lot of rumbling going on with the Christians that will soon be big news. In the next issue of National Geographic, there will be a translation of an ancient text that has just been revealed to the public. It claims to be written by Judas, the notorious betrayer of Jesus. What he claims might turn the view of the bible on its ear, but I think it’s amazing that 2,000 years of history is being rewritten as I write this. Because The Independent tends to only share their stories for a few days, I have copied the whole article on our site so it doesn’t vanish.

History of Christianity: The Gospel according to Judas
Yesterday, a 62-page codex, written from the point of view of the man who betrayed Christ and said to date from the 3rd or 4th century, was unveiled in Washington. A seismic moment for the Christian church?

Published: 07 April 2006
It will “shake Christianity to its foundations”. Or so the pre-publicity suggested. A 3rd or 4th-century document called “The Gospel of Judas” was launched upon an unsuspecting world yesterday by no less a biblical authority than the National Geographic magazine in Washington. Its contents were “explosive”, according to Mario Roberty, president of the Swiss foundation which now owns the ancient papyrus manuscript.

So as the heat faded from the television lights at the press conference, has 2000 years of orthodox Christianity been overturned? Well, not quite. But it was all jolly interesting, for those who love that sort of thing.

Half of the 62-page codex, written in Coptic script, is devoted to an account of the final days of Jesus Christ written from the viewpoint of the man who has for two millennia been excoriated as Christ’s deadly betrayer. The text begins: “The secret account of the revelation that Jesus spoke in conversation with Judas Iscariot three days before he celebrated Passover…”

Secret, hang on to that. That’s the important bit.

And though the manuscript has been carbon-dated to around 300AD, it is likely to be a copy of an earlier Greek manuscript written around the year 150AD, in the same period when the gospels of Mark, Matthew, Luke and John were also written down. So, the new discovery is serious competition, the National Geographic people implied, for the official version.

What The Gospel of Judas says is that, far from being Jesus’s enemy, Judas was his chief apostle - who “betrayed” him to the authorities at the actual request of his master in order to fulfil a divine ordinance for the salvation of the world. Judas, alone of the disciples, understood the true significance of Jesus’ teachings - because Jesus told him. “You will exceed all of them,” Jesus tells the main man in the key passage in the text, “for you will sacrifice the man that clothed me”.

Thus the individual whose name has entered the language as a synonym for traitor - selling his master for 30 pieces of silver, the amount for which the law of Moses specified an Israelite could buy or sell a slave - was, instead of being the big villain, the secret hero.

“The Pharisees … went to Judas and told him … although you are evil in this place, you are Jesus’ true disciple. And he answered them as they wanted him to. And Judas received the money. And he surrendered him. This is the end of the Gospel of Judas.” Without Judas’s help, Jesus would not have been crucified and God’s plan to redeem mankind, the Gospel suggests, would not have been fulfilled.

What makes all this rather dubious is not just the provenance of the new document, though as a dossier it is dodgy enough. The National Geographic yesterday said the manuscript had been found in Egypt in El Minya on the Nile in 1978 - though when it was offered to potential buyers previously it was variously said to have been found elsewhere in Egypt in 1947, during the 1960s, in the mid-70s, and in 1980.

It was first shown to academics in a seedy hotel room in Geneva in 1983. They turned down the $3m asking price for the smuggled book. There was at least one other known attempt to sell it in the 1990s after which it languished in a safe deposit box in New York where the condition of the papyrus deteriorated.

But then in 2004 Professor Rudolf Kasser caused a stir at a conference of Coptic specialists in Paris by announcing that he was working on translating the text from the same Sahidic dialect of Coptic used in the 46 different apocryphal texts discovered in 1945 near Nag Hammadi in Egypt - books such as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, and the Gospel of Truth which had prompted a major re-evaluation of early Christian history. The rumour was that the National Geographic had bought the Gospel of Judas manuscript, which also contained several other works.

There was no doubt that a Gospel of Judas had once existed. That much was clear from the writings of a second-century bishop, St Irenaeus of Lyons, who condemned it in his work Adversus Haereses (Against the Heresies) written around 180AD. He even set out what it said. Its authors “believe that Judas the Betrayer was fully informed of these things and that he alone, knowing the truth as no others did, fulfilled the secret of betrayal that confused all things, both in heaven and on earth”. The text was the work of a sect called the Cainites who were so determined to accentuate the positive that they saw Cain (the Old Testament’s first murderer) as a hero too. Some academics suggest that Irenaeus took as his source Justin Martyr which would date the Gospel of Judas 120AD.

The Cainites were part of a movement known as the Gnostics, a sect often described as Christian heresy but which was a syncretistic tendency that picked-and-mixed elements from many different religions. What was common to their magpie pickings was the notion that salvation was to be achieved by the acquisition of secret or arcane knowledge (gnosis in Greek). The Gospel of Judas suits their purposes admirably. It contains a radically different creation story, with the world created by angels, and in several places in the text Judas is singled out for special treatment by Jesus:

“Step away from the others and I shall tell you the secret of the kingdom. It is possible for you to reach it but you will grieve a great deal.

“Look, you have been told everything. Lift up your eyes and look at the cloud and the light within it and the stars surrounding it. The star that leads the way is your star.”

If only these Gnostics could acquire the same secret knowledge given by Jesus to his inner circle, they would be saved too.

The modern world is not big on salvation - though our obsession with “personal fulfilment” is an attenuated version of the notion - but we are still terribly keen on secrets. The persistence of Gnosticism through the centuries is testimony to that, surfacing in everything from medieval heresies to modern romanticism - it is there in William Blake, in theosophy, Aleister Crowley, Jung and most recently in the work of Philip Pullman.

And it plays into the contemporary proclivity for conspiracy. Mario Roberty, the Judas manuscript’s owner, is wont to drop dark hints about there being another copy of the unauthorised gospel - in the Vatican Library which the Church of Rome has for centuries refused to publish.

“It is highly logical that the Catholic Church would have kept a copy of the forbidden gospels,” he has said. The Vatican only makes life easier for such searchers after the arcane by refusing to deny such claims, though to be fair, as the plethora of books like The Da Vinci Code and Holy Blood, Holy Grail show, Rome could spend all its time denying all manner of hair-brained claims that secularists find more plausible than the central Christian notion that God became man in Jesus Christ.

All that, and the post-Freudian urge to uncover psychological motivation, explains the attraction of Judas to our time. For the past 100 years the figure who has for two millennia been the archetype of treachery has been far more likely to be accorded sympathetic treatment than in the days when he was seen as the personification of betrayal.

Edward Elgar in his oratorio, The Apostles, depicted Judas’s betrayal as an attempt to force Jesus to declare his divinity and establish the kingdom on earth. One of Jorge Luis Borges’ short stories in Three Versions of Judas concluded that Judas is the true saviour of humanity.

The film The Last Temptation Of Christ drew on the notion that the crucifixion of Christ was a conscious re-enactment of biblical prophecy in which Judas acted with Jesus’s full knowledge. The musical Jesus Christ Superstar shows Judas as a man who believes in and loves Jesus, but wants a lasting charity organisation rather than a new religion.

Judas is even to get an empathetic portrayal in next week’s BBC extravaganza, The Manchester Passion, which dramatises the final hours of the life of Christ with songs from local rock groups, including Oasis, Joy Division, New Order and M People - Judas will sing The Smiths’ “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now”. And after that one of the Holy Blood, Holy Grail authors is to produce a new book alleging that it was Judas rather than Jesus who died on the Cross. (Not that there is anything new in that either, by the way; a similar claim is to be found in the medieval Gospel of Barnabas whose author won’t at least sue in the High Court for plagiarism).

All of which seems to have left the foundations of Christianity - currently with 1.6 billion believers worldwide, and growing - looking decidedly unshaken. One of the scholars wheeled out for yesterday’s launch Elaine Pagels, Professor of Religion at Princeton University, the author of The Gnostic Gospels, was enthusiastic about the addition of the Gospel of Judas to the Gnostic canon. “[This] is transforming our understanding of early Christianity,” she said. “These discoveries are exploding the myth of a monolithic religion.”

But most experts remain underwhelmed. “In a way we have been through these things before, with the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi library,” said Father Donald Senior, president of the American Catholic Theological Union, another of the prominent theologians at the launch.

“I think the most important thing will be to highlight the diversity of the early Christian community. But will it be a source of inspiration and teaching today? I doubt it.”

It will “shake Christianity to its foundations”. Or so the pre-publicity suggested. A 3rd or 4th-century document called “The Gospel of Judas” was launched upon an unsuspecting world yesterday by no less a biblical authority than the National Geographic magazine in Washington. Its contents were “explosive”, according to Mario Roberty, president of the Swiss foundation which now owns the ancient papyrus manuscript.

So as the heat faded from the television lights at the press conference, has 2000 years of orthodox Christianity been overturned? Well, not quite. But it was all jolly interesting, for those who love that sort of thing.

Half of the 62-page codex, written in Coptic script, is devoted to an account of the final days of Jesus Christ written from the viewpoint of the man who has for two millennia been excoriated as Christ’s deadly betrayer. The text begins: “The secret account of the revelation that Jesus spoke in conversation with Judas Iscariot three days before he celebrated Passover…”

Secret, hang on to that. That’s the important bit.

And though the manuscript has been carbon-dated to around 300AD, it is likely to be a copy of an earlier Greek manuscript written around the year 150AD, in the same period when the gospels of Mark, Matthew, Luke and John were also written down. So, the new discovery is serious competition, the National Geographic people implied, for the official version.

What The Gospel of Judas says is that, far from being Jesus’s enemy, Judas was his chief apostle - who “betrayed” him to the authorities at the actual request of his master in order to fulfil a divine ordinance for the salvation of the world. Judas, alone of the disciples, understood the true significance of Jesus’ teachings - because Jesus told him. “You will exceed all of them,” Jesus tells the main man in the key passage in the text, “for you will sacrifice the man that clothed me”.

Thus the individual whose name has entered the language as a synonym for traitor - selling his master for 30 pieces of silver, the amount for which the law of Moses specified an Israelite could buy or sell a slave - was, instead of being the big villain, the secret hero.

“The Pharisees … went to Judas and told him … although you are evil in this place, you are Jesus’ true disciple. And he answered them as they wanted him to. And Judas received the money. And he surrendered him. This is the end of the Gospel of Judas.” Without Judas’s help, Jesus would not have been crucified and God’s plan to redeem mankind, the Gospel suggests, would not have been fulfilled.

What makes all this rather dubious is not just the provenance of the new document, though as a dossier it is dodgy enough. The National Geographic yesterday said the manuscript had been found in Egypt in El Minya on the Nile in 1978 - though when it was offered to potential buyers previously it was variously said to have been found elsewhere in Egypt in 1947, during the 1960s, in the mid-70s, and in 1980.

It was first shown to academics in a seedy hotel room in Geneva in 1983. They turned down the $3m asking price for the smuggled book. There was at least one other known attempt to sell it in the 1990s after which it languished in a safe deposit box in New York where the condition of the papyrus deteriorated.

But then in 2004 Professor Rudolf Kasser caused a stir at a conference of Coptic specialists in Paris by announcing that he was working on translating the text from the same Sahidic dialect of Coptic used in the 46 different apocryphal texts discovered in 1945 near Nag Hammadi in Egypt - books such as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, and the Gospel of Truth which had prompted a major re-evaluation of early Christian history. The rumour was that the National Geographic had bought the Gospel of Judas manuscript, which also contained several other works.

There was no doubt that a Gospel of Judas had once existed. That much was clear from the writings of a second-century bishop, St Irenaeus of Lyons, who condemned it in his work Adversus Haereses (Against the Heresies) written around 180AD. He even set out what it said. Its authors “believe that Judas the Betrayer was fully informed of these things and that he alone, knowing the truth as no others did, fulfilled the secret of betrayal that confused all things, both in heaven and on earth”. The text was the work of a sect called the Cainites who were so determined to accentuate the positive that they saw Cain (the Old Testament’s first murderer) as a hero too. Some academics suggest that Irenaeus took as his source Justin Martyr which would date the Gospel of Judas 120AD.

The Cainites were part of a movement known as the Gnostics, a sect often described as Christian heresy but which was a syncretistic tendency that picked-and-mixed elements from many different religions. What was common to their magpie pickings was the notion that salvation was to be achieved by the acquisition of secret or arcane knowledge (gnosis in Greek). The Gospel of Judas suits their purposes admirably. It contains a radically different creation story, with the world created by angels, and in several places in the text Judas is singled out for special treatment by Jesus: “Step away from the others and I shall tell you the secret of the kingdom. It is possible for you to reach it but you will grieve a great deal.

“Look, you have been told everything. Lift up your eyes and look at the cloud and the light within it and the stars surrounding it. The star that leads the way is your star.”

If only these Gnostics could acquire the same secret knowledge given by Jesus to his inner circle, they would be saved too.

The modern world is not big on salvation - though our obsession with “personal fulfilment” is an attenuated version of the notion - but we are still terribly keen on secrets. The persistence of Gnosticism through the centuries is testimony to that, surfacing in everything from medieval heresies to modern romanticism - it is there in William Blake, in theosophy, Aleister Crowley, Jung and most recently in the work of Philip Pullman.

And it plays into the contemporary proclivity for conspiracy. Mario Roberty, the Judas manuscript’s owner, is wont to drop dark hints about there being another copy of the unauthorised gospel - in the Vatican Library which the Church of Rome has for centuries refused to publish.

“It is highly logical that the Catholic Church would have kept a copy of the forbidden gospels,” he has said. The Vatican only makes life easier for such searchers after the arcane by refusing to deny such claims, though to be fair, as the plethora of books like The Da Vinci Code and Holy Blood, Holy Grail show, Rome could spend all its time denying all manner of hair-brained claims that secularists find more plausible than the central Christian notion that God became man in Jesus Christ.

All that, and the post-Freudian urge to uncover psychological motivation, explains the attraction of Judas to our time. For the past 100 years the figure who has for two millennia been the archetype of treachery has been far more likely to be accorded sympathetic treatment than in the days when he was seen as the personification of betrayal.

Edward Elgar in his oratorio, The Apostles, depicted Judas’s betrayal as an attempt to force Jesus to declare his divinity and establish the kingdom on earth. One of Jorge Luis Borges’ short stories in Three Versions of Judas concluded that Judas is the true saviour of humanity.

The film The Last Temptation Of Christ drew on the notion that the crucifixion of Christ was a conscious re-enactment of biblical prophecy in which Judas acted with Jesus’s full knowledge. The musical Jesus Christ Superstar shows Judas as a man who believes in and loves Jesus, but wants a lasting charity organisation rather than a new religion.

Judas is even to get an empathetic portrayal in next week’s BBC extravaganza, The Manchester Passion, which dramatises the final hours of the life of Christ with songs from local rock groups, including Oasis, Joy Division, New Order and M People - Judas will sing The Smiths’ “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now”. And after that one of the Holy Blood, Holy Grail authors is to produce a new book alleging that it was Judas rather than Jesus who died on the Cross. (Not that there is anything new in that either, by the way; a similar claim is to be found in the medieval Gospel of Barnabas whose author won’t at least sue in the High Court for plagiarism).

All of which seems to have left the foundations of Christianity - currently with 1.6 billion believers worldwide, and growing - looking decidedly unshaken. One of the scholars wheeled out for yesterday’s launch Elaine Pagels, Professor of Religion at Princeton University, the author of The Gnostic Gospels, was enthusiastic about the addition of the Gospel of Judas to the Gnostic canon. “[This] is transforming our understanding of early Christianity,” she said. “These discoveries are exploding the myth of a monolithic religion.”

But most experts remain underwhelmed. “In a way we have been through these things before, with the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi library,” said Father Donald Senior, president of the American Catholic Theological Union, another of the prominent theologians at the launch.

“I think the most important thing will be to highlight the diversity of the early Christian community. But will it be a source of inspiration and teaching today? I doubt it.”

–Paul Vallely and Andrew Buncombe

As I’ve gotten older and more reflective, I’ve begun to see the inconsistencies in the religion has been spoon fed to me; reaching the point where I don’t attend church anymore. I remember a conversation with Lucy when he let me borrow An Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by Buckminster Fuller. There was a passage about his thoughts on the interpretations of the Bible that has always stuck with me. For example, Jesus walking on the water was really a mistranslation that really meant that he was an experienced sailor and impressed his disciples with his knowledge of the seas. How did he learn how to sail? because there are a good 20 years of Jesus’ life that are unaccounted for, in which he could have taken to the vast “desert” of water, landing on various foreign soils and learning a little about their culture and trade. When he returned, he had an unusual knowledge for the nether regions of civilization and an uncommon knowledge of exotic spices and herbs.
This brings my thoughts to a great movie, The Serpent and the Rainbow, the best film Wes Craven ever made. It discusses a drug that induces a deep sleep, to the point that the user stops breathing and a heartbeat is undetectable. There is a theory that Jesus knew of a similar drug that could slow his breathing and heart rate down enough that he would not suffocate or bleed to death on the cross. In three days he could come back and prove to the world his prophecy.
We now have some proof that he set up his own murder. So if his assassination was premeditated martyrdom on his part, could it be a possibility that his coming again was also part of his plan?
HAPPY EASTER!

By Lucy, Optimism, NicaraguaApril 5, 2006 6:18 pm

Have you ever wondered if it was possible for one plot of land to be self-sufficient? One organization in Nicaragua called CIPRES did, and they figured out that indeed it is possible. Not only that, but fairly easy. Here’s the plans:

CIPRES sustainable farm

And here’s the link:

http://www.cipres.org/ (it’s in Spanish)

So, what does that mean? Or at least, what does this mean for Lucy? This means that a family of humans can potentially live on two acres of land without ever having to import food or energy.

So, if everyone in the World (roughly 6,700,000,000 people) moved to the state of Texas, every single person would have about 1,090 SF of land to live on. Not much for a farm, I know.

But, if everyone in the US (roughly 295,700,000 people) moved to the state of Texas, every single person would have about 333,500 SF of land to live on…That’s more than 7.5 acres per person. Am I wrong, or does it seem as if there is plenty of land for everyone? And with this land that’s so plentiful, with the model shown above, comes lots of food to go around. It’s all just a matter of “doing” it.

Good luck with this Slingshot, I’ve actually been meaning to show this to you for a while. I’m thinking you’ll be into this.

Love,
Lucy

By Slingshot, Will Someone Please Think of the Children 4:42 pm

I won't be good?
I received this series of emails this morning from my Almer Mater. I’ve changed the names to protect the ignorrant, but the rest is exactly as it came to me. This gives those that weren’t there a sense of what kind of bullshit both teachers and students have to put up with. (look at me, I still end sentences with prepositions!) Truly amazing that these converstaions still occur between teachers, but it’s a peephole into some of the people teaching our future.

Faculty and Staff:
It has been brought to my attention that clarification is needed on how we calculate grades. Adding the two quarters or nine weeks together and dividing by two will calculate the semester average. For instance, a student might earn a 90 for Q1 and a 95 for Q2. Therefore, the average is adding the two together and dividing by two, 92.5 =93.
Adding the semester averages for each semester twice to the final exam and dividing by five will calculate the final grade. For example, if a student has a 93 for first semester, an 89 for second semester and a final exam grade of a 78, the following would be used to calculate the grade:
93 = 442
Now, we take the 442 and divide it by 5=88.4 or an 88.
In talking with Mr. Keyserling and Mr. Stowe, these formulas should be incorporated into the IGPRO spreadsheets. If this is not the case for your spreadsheets, please contact Mr. Keyserling, Mr. Stowe, Dr. Jackson, Ms. Krauer, Mr. Allen, Mr. Lentz or myself. We will be happy to assist you in correcting the spreadsheets.
Thank you for your time and cooperation.

Dr. Mona Lisa Dix
Assistant Principal
“It’s about creating an environment of teaching and learning.”

Ms. Dickson:
There is a need for further clarification and or justification for why we are adopting a grading calculation policy that penalizes the students instead of helping the student. This new formula takes approximately 4 percentage points from the student as demonstrated in a recent issue about a students grade, i.e., the old formula gave the student a grade of 72.5%, but the new formula gave the student a grade of 68.5%. I question are we helping or hurting the student. It is my understanding that this calculation was arrived at by yourself and Ginger Hopkins; is this a new formula for the entire county or just something for Beaufort High School? Further, is this the formula utilized by the State of South Carolina and when was it published that this change would take place?
If we truly intend to create an environment of teaching and learning, every consideration must be given to giving the student the advantage and not penalizing them. I by this e-mail am filing a notice of my personal dissent to this unfair change in the grading policy and request that we take another look at this to make certain that all of us in the county and the state are on the same page when it comes to student evaluation.
There is never a inconvenient time to do the right thing.

Dr. Walter Eagle
Vice Principal
School Test Coordinator

Dr. Hawk, I agree with your assessment. This new formula is not good. It penalizes the students.
The old formula works to the best interest of the students.
Policy changes like this must be handled much better than this. This is a major policy change.

More people need to be involved in this process than Ms. Dickson and Mrs. Hopkins. According to Ms. Dickson, she and Mrs. Ginger Hopkins discussed the need for the new formula because they felt that the students were being tested to much.

This is not good. This is a trap set for students to fail. Students already have many traps set up for them to fail by some of the very people who have been entrusted to teach them. They do not need another one.

We must have a serious discussion on this matter. We are suppose to be in a democratic society, the collected should have been involved in this process. This includes students, parents, teachers, school board members, and general public.

This is pure madness. It must stop. Let us actually try to help the students instead of hindering them. The new formula hinders.

I applaud you Dr. Hawk for having the intestinal fortitude to stand up for what is right. I which there were more people like you in positions of authority. The children need you.

O. Adejola

While we are all sounding off on the grading policy, I guess I’ll throw in my two cents. The grading policy is great! It’s easy and straight-forward. As far as a grading policy “penalizing” students, I think only poor grades and lack of studying penalize students. I mean, I could make up a grading policy that gives every student in this school an “A” in every class. It doesn’t directly PENALIZE anybody, but is it ethical? Just because the new policy gave the kid a lower grade doesn’t mean that the old one was right. Who says the old one wasn’t severely flawed and now you are using it for comparison? I think “creating an environment of teaching and learning” is about holding students accountable. “You want good grades kids? Here is our school’s grading policy. You will have a final that is weighted this much…fail it and you will be penalized.”

Brad Simmons

Thank you for your two cents. It shows exactly how much compassion you have for student success and their self-esteem.

Unjust policies also penalizes students. History demonstrates this fact repeatedly.

Supposedly, you are a student of history. Therefore you must be aware of the policy that was put in place during the inhumane system of chattel slavery. This policy said that if a slave ran away from his master, then he was stealing himself. This policy was put in place by European slavemasters.

Because the slave wanted to be free from bondage, he stole himself. He went against a policy that penalizes him for wanted to be free.

This clearly indicates that policies can be penalizing. Although you can acknowledge that poor grades and the lack of studying penalize students, you fail to acknowledge how policies can also penalize.

Once again, I thank you for revealing how much compassion you have (2%).

Parents need to be made aware of your thoughts.

O. Adejola

Truly tempting, but I don’t care to make a business discussion a matter of personal attacks.

–Simmons

By Johnny Palmetto, OptimismApril 4, 2006 9:43 pm

Ben Lay
Part of the reason I like writing my dissertation is that I get to re-discover obscure figures in American history… Benjamin Lay spent most of his life in Pennsylvania around Philadelphia from 1731 to 1758. He and his wife Sarah lived rather simply and according to their morals. They wouldn’t eat meat or buy products associated with slavery. Both were hunchbacks and Ben had a long-ass beard.

Ben Lay was vehemently opposed to slavery at a time when many Quakers owned slaves. See his book ALL SLAVEKEEPERS THAT KEEP THE INNOCENT IN BONDAGE, APOSTATES (New York: Arno Press, 1969). Lay was thrown out of churches and Quaker meetings–literally. One time he was tossed out and remained on threshold and wouldn’t move. Another time he buried his foot in the snow outside meeting to demonstrate the pain slaves must feel working in the cold with very little clothing.

The Quakers eventually disowned him. But he had already made his mark on John Woolman and Anthony Benezet two Quakers who convinced the Society of Friends to ban slavery…

By Jórge, OptimismApril 2, 2006 2:25 pm

Some heartening news from the folks at the Institute for Research on Unlimited Love:

Feelings of altruism and altruistic behaviors have been increasing in recent years, according to the survey, which found that the traditional value of caring for others is something most Americans agree on, despite their political differences.

The survey found that 75 percent of respondents in the recent survey reported having tender, concerned feelings toward the less fortunate, 5 percent more than reported in 2002. The number of respondents who felt people should look out for themselves and not “overly worry about others” fell by 7 percent in the recent survey to 25 percent.

Hey, we’ll take whatever we can get these days.
Also of note in the study, which linked altruistic love to romantic love:

* Women have a greater feeling of empathy than men.
* Children who grow up in a two-parent household are more likely to develop empathetic feelings, while those reared only by mothers, are slightly more likely to develop the feelings.
* Least likely to develop empathy are children, particularly girls, raised only by a father.
* Financial status had very little to do with feelings of altruism or empathy.