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61
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / Re: Recurrance/Eternal cycle
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on: September 28, 2005, 09:47:57 AM
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Pmith
I agree.
Nietzshe accepted eternal recurrance because it seemed the most distressing thought he cd think and he felt that only by accepting the worst and still affirming life instead of cursing it does one become a philosopher
Did Sunny Jim accept it or parody it in FINNEGANS WAKE? |
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62
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / LEARNING BY DOING
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on: September 28, 2005, 09:36:02 AM
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The Speech Everyone Is Talking About: Etan Thomas Electrifies Anti-War Washington
By Dave Zirin Edge of Sports September 26, 2005
Every generation the wide world of corporate sports produces an athlete with the iron resolve and moral urgency to step off their pedestal and join the fight for social justice. A century ago, it was boxer Jack Johnson, flaunting, as WEB DuBois put it, "his unforgivable blackness." In the 1930s, "the Brown Bomber" Joe Louis and track star Jesse Owens took turns spitting in Hitler's eyes, and Mildred Babe Didrikson continued to show that a woman could be the equal - if not superior - of any man. In the 1940s and 50s, Jackie Robinson, Pee Wee Reese, and the Brooklyn Dodgers advanced the cause of civil rights through the transgressive act of the multi-racial double play. In the 1960s, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, Bill Russell, David Meggyesy, Tommie Smith, and John Carlos showed how mass struggle could ricochet into the world of sports with electric results.
Today we may just have a figure to join their ranks in the NBA's Etan Thomas, ho is also the author of a book of poems called More Than An Athlete.
But this past weekend, Etan made a play for pantheon status. Etan took it to that Ali level, by delivering a blistering poetical speech as part of the weekend's anti-war demonstrations in Washington DC. Here is the transcript. Read and pass it along - it has the power to topple tyrants.
'Giving all honor, thanks and praises to God for courage and wisdom, this is a very important rally. I'd like to thank you for allowing me to share my thoughts, feelings and concerns regarding a tremendous problem that we are currently facing. This problem is universal, transcending race, economic background, religion, and culture, and this problem is none other than the current administration which has set up shop in the White House.
In fact, I'd like to take some of these cats on a field trip. I want to get big yellow buses with no air conditioner and no seatbelts and round up Bill O'Reilly, Pat Buchanan, Trent Lott, Sean Hannity, Dick Cheney, Jeb Bush, Bush Jr. and Bush Sr., John Ashcroft, Giuliani, Ed Gillespie, Katherine Harris, that little bow-tied Tucker Carlson and any other right-wing conservative Republicans I can think of, and take them all on a trip to the hood. Not to do no 30-minute documentary. I mean, I want to drop them off and leave them there, let them become one with the other side of the tracks, get them four mouths to feed and no welfare, have scare tactics run through them like a laxative, criticizing them for needing assistance.
I'd show them working families that make too much to receive welfare but not enough to make ends meet. I'd employ them with jobs with little security, let them know how it feels to be an employee at will, able to be fired at the drop of a hat. I'd take away their opportunities, then try their children as adults, sending their 13-year-old babies to life in prison. I'd sell them dreams of hopelessness while spoon-feeding their young with a daily dose of inferior education. I'd tell them no child shall be left behind, then take more money out of their schools, tell them to show and prove themselves on standardized exams testing their knowledge on things that they haven't been taught, and then I'd call them inferior.
I'd soak into their interior notions of endless possibilities. I'd paint pictures of assisted productivity if they only agreed to be all they can be, dress them up with fatigues and boots with promises of pots of gold at the end of rainbows, free education to waste terrain on those who finish their bid. Then I'd close the lid on that barrel of fool's gold by starting a war, sending their children into the midst of a hostile situation, and while they're worried about their babies being murdered and slain in foreign lands, I'd grace them with the pain of being sick and unable to get medicine.
Give them health benefits that barely cover the common cold. John Q. would become their reality as HMOs introduce them to the world of inferior care, filling their lungs with inadequate air, penny pinching at the expense of patients, doctors practicing medicine in an intricate web of rationing and regulations. Patients wander the maze of managed bureaucracy, costs rise and quality quickly deteriorates, but they say that managed care is cheaper. They'll say that free choice in medicine will defeat the overall productivity, and as co-payments are steadily rising, I'll make their grandparents have to choose between buying their medicine and paying their rent.
Then I'd feed them hypocritical lines of being pro-life as the only Christian way to be. Then very contradictingly, I'd fight for the spread of the death penalty, as if thou shall not kill applies to babies but not to criminals.
Then I'd introduce them to those sworn to protect and serve, creating a curb in their trust in the law. I'd show them the nightsticks and plungers, the pepper spray and stun guns, the mace and magnums that they'd soon become acquainted with, the shakedowns and illegal search and seizures, the planted evidence, being stopped for no reason. Harassment ain't even the half of it. Forty-one shots to two raised hands, cell phones and wallets that are confused with illegal contrabands. I'd introduce them to pigs who love making their guns click like wine glasses. Everlasting targets surrounded by bullets, making them a walking bull's eye, a living pinata, held at the mercy of police brutality, and then we'll see if they finally weren't aware of the truth, if their eyes weren't finally open like a box of Pandora.
I'd show them how the other side of the tracks carries the weight of the world on our shoulders and how society seems to be holding us down with the force of a boulder. The bird of democracy flew the coop back in Florida. See, for some, and justice comes in packs like wolves in sheep's clothing. T.K.O.d by the right hooks of life, many are left staggering under the weight of the day, leaning against the ropes of hope. When your dreams have fallen on barren ground, it becomes difficult to keep pushing yourself forward like a train, administering pain like a doctor with a needle, their sequels continue more lethal than injections.
They keep telling us all is equal. I'd tell them that instead of giving tax breaks to the rich, financing corporate mergers and leading us into unnecessary wars and under-table dealings with Enron and Halliburton, maybe they can work on making society more peaceful. Instead, they take more and more money out of inner city schools, give up on the idea of rehabilitation and build more prisons for poor people. With unemployment continuing to rise like a deficit, it's no wonder why so many think that crime pays.
Maybe this trip will make them see the error of their ways. Or maybe next time, we'll just all get out and vote. And as far as their stay in the White House, tell them that numbered are their days.' _________
........................................... Pelorian Digital http://www.pelorian.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / Re: Recurrance/Eternal cycle
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on: September 28, 2005, 09:20:18 AM
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Kontos --
Infinite space + infinite time = eternal recurrance
Nietzsche hated the thought at first because 1] his cosmology seemed to demand it 2] it means an infinite repeat of [the euro equivelant of George W Bush]
HE FINALLY ACCEPTED IT... |
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / Re: A TEST
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on: September 28, 2005, 09:09:23 AM
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I HAD spooks in my computer
and
MLA had spooks in its system
Both seem fixed now
maybe
Thanks for your patience |
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / Re: A TEST
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on: September 26, 2005, 06:41:16 PM
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The
following speech was made during the PBS/BET-televised Higher Ground
Hurricane Relief Benefit concert on Saturday, September 17, 2005
Danny Glover:
New
Orleans is the site of so many "wonderful things", the city being a
great crossroads of diverse peoples, languages, architectures,
cuisines, and rhythms through the centuries. But it has also been the
site of shameful things - slavery, exploitation and neglect.
When
the hurricane struck the Gulf and the floodwaters rose and tore through
New Orleans, plunging its remaining population into a carnival of
misery, it did not turn the region into a Third World country - as it
has been disparagingly implied in the media - it revealed one. It
revealed the disaster within the disaster: grueling poverty rose to the
surface like a bruise to our skin. But the storm not only revealed
the poverty of those most vulnerable, those left behind. It revealed
the poverty of skewed priorities that put the shoulder of technology to
the wheel of death rather than life, creating killing machines that are
now called "smart" and surveillance systems that, in the words of the
great Guyanese poet Martin Carter, "are watching you sleep and aiming
at your dreams." Mother Nature revealed the poverty of a mindset
that narrowly views security as a military issue. That is blind to the
role of culture in sustaining the mental health and social wellness of
people, which is also the basis for economic productivity. Blind to the
role of culture in education, through which we are prepared for our
responsibilities in a democracy. And hostile to the role of culture in
the search for truth. Hurricane Katrina revealed, more than anything else, a poverty of imagination.
Arms in the hands of the citizens may be used for the defense of the country, the overthrow of tyranny or private self defense. --John Adams |
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Course Assignments / WEEK SEVEN / Re: A TEST
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on: September 26, 2005, 06:31:09 PM
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THANKs A MILLION
IT MEANS A LOT WHEN I SOLVE A COMPUTER GLITCH BEFORE MY FRIENDS GET HERE TO HELP ME
OLD AGE IS NOT A DISEASE IT'S 101 DIFFERENT GOD-DAMN NUISANCES A DAY |
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Course Assignments / WEEK SIX / Re: Pound and/or Joyce
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on: September 23, 2005, 12:17:31 PM
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JJ told friends once that he wan't the author of FINNEGANS WAKE -- "It is you, and you, an the man at the next table...."
"His consumers, are they not also his producers?" --FW refers to that, I think, and to Proudhon's debate with Bastiat about usury
For the seven lakes, and by no man these verses --Canto 49 |
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