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Jul 26, 2007

Europe uses drugs to lie to God's people



"I have related in a former chapter, the curious account given by the Delawares and Mohicans of the scene which took place when they were first made to taste spiritous liquors by the Dutch who landed on New York Island. I have no doubt that this tradition is substantially founded on fact. Indeed, it is strongly corroborated by the name which, in consequence of this adventure, those people gave at the time to that island, and which it has retained to this day. They call it Manahachtanienk, which in the Delaware language, means, "the island where we all became intoxicated." We have corrupted this name into Manhattan, but not so as to destroy its meaning, or conceal its origin. The last syllable which we have left out is only a termination, implying locality, and in this word signifies as much as where we. There are few Indian traditions so well supported as this.
How far from that time the dreadful vice of intoxication has increased among these poor Indians, is well known among many Christian peoples among us. We may safely calculate on thousands who have perished by the baneful effect of spiritous liquors. The dreadful war which took place in 1774 between the Shawanese, some of the Mingoes, amd the people of Virginia, in which so many lives were lost, was brought on by t he consequences of drunkenness. It produced murders, which were followed by private revenge, and ended in a most cruel and destructive war.
The general prevalence of this vice among the Indians is in a great degree owing to unprincipled white traders, who persuade them to become intoxicated that they may cheat them the more easily, and obtain their land or peltries for a mere trifle. Within the last fifty years, some instances have even come to my knowledge of white men having enticed Indians to drink, and when drunk, murdered them. The effects which intoxication produces among the Indians are dreadful. It has been the cause of an infinite number of murders among them, besides biting off noses and otherwise disfiguring each other, which are the least consequences of the quarrels that inebriation produces between them. I cannot say how many among them have died of colds and other disorders, which they have caught by lying upon the cold ground, and remaining exposed to the elements when drunk; others have lingered out their lives, in excruciating rheumatic pains and in wasting consumptions, until death came to relieve them from their sufferings.
Reflecting Indians have keenly remarked,
"that it was strange that a people who professed themselves believers in a religion revealed to them by the Great Spirit himself; who say that they have in their houses the WORD of God, and his laws and commandments textually written, could think of making a beson (This word means liquor, and is also used in the sense of a medicinal draught, or other compound potion.), calculated to bewitch people and make them destroy one another."
I once asked an Indian at Pittsburgh, whom I had not before seen, who he was? He answered in broken English: "My name is Blackfish; when at home with my nation, I am a clever fellow, and when here, a hog." He meant that by means of the liquor which the white people gave him, he was sunk to the level of that beast.


from~


"HISTORY, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS of THE INDIAN NATIONS WHO ONCE INHABITED PENNSYLVANIA AND THE NEIGHBOURING STATES."

BY THE REV. JOHN HECKEWELDER, OF BETHLEHEM, PA 1876





This was written when patriots were the colonists of a King

... and still this goes on...

to us all...

from Afghanistan to your streets.

Institutionally, legally, politically...

militantly.




Institutionally. Treasonously.
Shamefully.



http://espn.go.com/abcsports/mnf/s/annotatedmiller/index.html

The trio of cheap, fruity wines is produced by Ernest and Julio Gallo. The Gallo brothers inherited their family's vineyard in the mid-'30s after their father murdered their mother and then committed suicide. In the 1950s, 40-proof port mixed with lemon juice became a popular urban drink, and Gallo set out to emulate the flavor. The result, Thunderbird, became the high-alcohol wine of choice on the street, with an ad campaign to match: "What's the word?
Thunderbird!
How's it sold?
Good and cold!
What's the jive?
Bird's alive!"
Ripple went on to become Fred Sanford's beverage of choice, and many a teenager in the '70s got his or her first taste of liquor from the sickly-sweet fruit flavors of Boone's Farm. In the '80s, Ernest and Julio Gallo went on to create that most insidious of concoctions, the Bartles & Jaymes wine cooler. However, frustrated by this low-rent reputation, Ernest Gallo turned his attention to creating finer wines and today produces a large number of wines under classier names such as Marcelina, Frei Brothers Reserve and Ecco Domani.

~~

There is another verse to that ad jingle, it has become a sort of folksong at this point...
it changes depending on who you are, i guess... the way i learned it was

"Who drinks the most?
Us white folks."

Jul 21, 2007

Money may put bread on your table but why not just bake your own?

In this militant time of border fences, oil wars and terrorist threats...
drug wars, failing economies, record Corporate profits
political lies justified by pacification
and the continued reliance on fossil/nuclear energy
destroying our home, Mother Earth

In the economic context of several plants (a renewable resource) being worth well more than their weight in gold (due to police suppression)

and 90% of the world living so close with the Earth that the only contact they have with the "First World" is handouts and military suppression...

look at the worlds that are being made now... even further from the land and air and water and fire that made us all.

As i write this i listen to a radio. A light is on next to me. My digital mouse is being powered through my plasma widescreen laptop. A t.v. is muted in the background. A window A.C. unit is keeping the room cool during the hottest part of this day. A cellphone rests charging at my side.

this is how i relax (or pretend to)... enveloping myself in electricity... http://www.magelo.com/eq_view_profile.html?num=742086
this has been my digital persona for more than 5 years.


http://www.flatrock.org.nz/topics/info_and_tech/game_theories.htm

...

As Castronova stared at the auction listings, he recognised with a shock what he was looking at. It was a form of currency trading. Each item had a value in virtual "platinum pieces"; when it was sold on eBay, someone was paying cold hard American cash for it. That meant the platinum piece was worth something in real currency. EverQuest's economy actually had real-world value.

He began calculating frantically. He gathered data on 616 auctions, observing how much each item sold for in US dollars. When he averaged the results, he was stunned to discover that the EverQuest platinum piece was worth about US1¢ - higher than the Japanese yen or the Italian lira. With that information, he could figure out how fast the EverQuest economy was growing. Since players were killing monsters or skinning bunnies every day, they were, in effect, creating wealth. Crunching more numbers, Castronova found that the average player was generating 319 platinum pieces each hour he or she was in the game - the equivalent of US$3.42/hour. "That's higher than the minimum wage in most countries," he marvelled.

Then he performed one final analysis: The Gross National Product of EverQuest, measured by how much wealth all the players together created in a single year inside the game. It turned out to be US$2,266 per capita. By World Bank rankings, that made EverQuest richer than India, Bulgaria, or China, and nearly as wealthy as Russia. It was the 77th richest country in the world. And it didn't even exist.

Castronova sat back in his chair in his cramped home office, and the weird enormity of his findings dawned on him. Many economists define their careers by studying a country. He had discovered one.

...To figure out precisely who was playing EverQuest, Castronova persuaded 3,500 users to fill out a survey. As one might expect, the average age turned out to be 24, and the players were overwhelmingly male. The amount of time spent "in game" was staggering: over 20 hours a week, with the most devoted players logging 6 hours daily. 20% of players agreed with the cheeky (if alarming) statement "I live in Norrath but I travel outside of it regularly"; on average, each of these "residents" possessed virtual goods worth about US$3,000. "When you consider that the average real-life income in America is only, like, $37,000," Castronova tells me, "you realise these people have a non-trivial amount of wealth locked up inside the games."

When he finished his research, Castronova assembled it in a paper called "Virtual Worlds: A First-Hand Account of Market and Society on the Cyberian Frontier." He submitted it to an academic website, the Social Science Research Network, that distributes working papers free for anyone to read. The site has 43,982 papers, by more than 37,000 authors. He didn't expect too much. "I thought maybe 75 people would read it," he recalls, "and that'd be great." He was wrong. The paper sent a shock wave through the on-line world. EverQuest players pounced on it and wrote up excited descriptions on game-discussion boards. That led to a flurry of posts on popular blog sites. Soon, academics and pundits in Washington were rushing to read it. Barely a few months later, Castronova's paper became the most downloaded paper in the entire database - beating out works by dozens of Nobel laureates. Today, it's still in the top three.

Why the rush of interest? What can a game filled with elves and warrior dwarves tell us about the real world?

Quite a lot, if you believe the economist Edward Chamberlin. In 1948, Chamberlin admitted that all economists face a critical problem: they have no clean "laboratory" in which to study behaviour. "The social scientist ... cannot observe the actual operation of a real model under controlled circumstances," he wrote. "Economics is limited by the fact that resort cannot be had to the laboratory techniques of the natural sciences." Instead, classical economics tries to predict economic behaviour by theorizing about a completely fair marketplace in which people are rational actors and all things are equal.

The problem with this - as plenty of left-wing critics have pointed out - is that all things aren't equal. Some people are born into rich families, and blessed with great opportunities. Others are born into dirt-poor neighbourhoods where even the most brilliant mind coupled with hard work may not forge success. As a result, economists have warred for centuries over two diverging visions. Adam Smith argued that people inherently prefer a free market and the ability to rise above others; Karl Marx countered that capital was inherently unfair and those with power would abuse it. But no pristine world exists in which to test these theories - there is no country with a truly level playing field.

Except, possibly, for EverQuest, the world's first truly egalitarian polity. Everyone begins the same way: with nothing. You enter with pathetic skills, no money, and only the clothes on your back. Wealth comes from working hard, honing your skills, and clever trading. It is a genuine meritocracy, which is precisely why players love the game, Castronova argues. "It undoes all the inequities in society. They're wiped away. Thomas More would have dreamt about that possibility, that kind of utopia," he says.

Virtual worlds have produced some surreal rags-to-riches stories. When the on-line world Second Life launched, the players were impressed to see a female avatar industriously building a sprawling monster home. An in-game neighbour stopped by to say hello only to discover she was a homeless person in British Columbia, logging on using her single remaining possession, a laptop. Penniless in the real world, she belonged to a social elite in the fake one.

and then what????????????????






Jul 20, 2007

The Revolution is not being weblogged

http://www.flag.blackened.net/revolt/mexico/ezln/marcos_virgin_mar95.html

...All right, isn't it logical to suppose that this "someone" would be bored and wish to be freed of such a circular sentence? Yes, I know that, in the case of the Moon, there is that silly chain of the "force of gravity." But.. why then not let yourelf drop? You still doubt! Okay, it's not important.. We geniuses have always been misunderstood.. at first. All right, all right, be kind (remember that it's spring), grant me that it's like this, that the Moon is a prisoner, and that, nevertheless, she takes no vengeance on the one who makes her a prisoner.

Who is it that keeps her prisoner? The human being! If they hadn't invented that "law of gravity," the Moon would have been off romping about Jupiter or Saturn or even further...

Thus, the Moon undoubtedly has hope, hope of seeing herself free and able to go wherever she lunatically desires. What is one of the main consequences of this fact? Well, it's that if the Moon escapes, whether it's because the silly chain breaks or because her jailer forgets to tie her, people in love won't be able to use her as a reference anymore, to convince or to deny.

How could they say, "In the double moon of your breast, hands, kisses and gazes surrender," or that other one, "with the complicity of the moon I discovered the pleasure you had hidden in your womb," or, also, "Don't bring your breath any closer, the Moon will flee, frightened to see us as one"? So, these are only some examples, but you can see what kind of problems would arise the night the Moon abandons her usual route and just leaves, to ride off into the stars...

P.S. to the lunatic P.S.

One must also be careful with the Moon. Many years ago, one Knight of the White Moon defeated me on the beaches of Barcino and obliged me, ungrateful, to put away arms and warlike desires for a good while. Now I have freed myself, but that's another story I'll tell you... another moon.

P.S. that, understanding, offers an alternative.


All right, if you don't want to publish it in the science column, at least do me the favor of tying that postscript with a little string to the UNAMSAT-1 and tell them to let it go when they pass by the Moon. It will do her good to know that someone understands her...

Go on again.
Health, and may hands and moons find each other.

The Sup


Vencidos
de León Felipe

"Por la manchega llanura
se vuelve a ver la figura
de Don Quijote pasar.

Y ahora ociosa y abollada va en el rucio la armadura,
y va ocioso el caballero, sin peto y sin espaldar,
va cargado de amargura,
que allá encontró sepultura
su amoroso batallar.
Va cargado de amargura,
que allá «quedó su ventura»
en la playa de Barcino, frente al mar..."

Mexico: The moon between the mirrors of the night and the crystal of the day


"I want you for a crystal, never a mirror".
Pedro Salinas

May of 1985. Dawn. The moon peers at the mirror of the lake and jealously, the moon wrinkles its face with its waves. In the middle of the trajectory between one and the other side, we venture in a canoe which has the same firmness as my decision to cross the lake. Old Man Antonio has invited me to test his canoe. For the past 28 nights, from the new to the full moon, old man Antonio has worked, with machete and ax, a large cedar trunk. The vessel is seven meters long. Old Man Antonio explains that canoes can be made of cedar, mahogany, huanacastle, bariy, and he points out the different trees he names. Old Man Antonio is determined to point them out, but I can't tell them apart; they are all large trees as far as I'm concerned. That was during the day; now it is dawn, and as usual we are here navigating in this little wooden cedar vessel which Old Man Antonio has baptized "The Troublemaker". "In honor of the moon" says Old Man Antonio while he rows with a large and thick stick. Now we are in the middle of the lake. The wind paints curls on the water and the canoe rises and falls. Old Man Antonio decides he should wait until the wind dies down, and he allows the vessel to float.

"These waves cannot turn the canoe over" he says, as his cigarette makes smoke spirals much as the wind makes waves. The moon is full, and in its light, it is possible to make out the large islets which dot the Miramar lake. Through a smoke spiral Old Man Antonio calls up an old story.

I'm more worried about sinking, which appears imminent (I can't decide whether to be nauseous or terrified), so I'm not ready for fables or stories. This, of course, is neither here nor there for Old Man Antonio because, reclined on the bottom of the canoe, he begins to weave his tale...

THE MIRRORS' TALE

"The oldest of the elders say that the moon was born right here, in the jungle. They say that a long time ago, the gods had overslept, tired of playing and doing so much. The world was somewhat silent. Quiet it was. But a soft cry was heard up there in the mountain. Seems like the gods had forgotten a lake and left it in the middle of the mountain. When they divided up the things of the Earth, the little lake was left over, and since they did not know where else to put it, they just left it there, in the midst of so many hills that no one could find themselves there. So the little lake was crying because it was alone. And its cries were such that the heart of the Mother Cedar, who is the sustainer of the world, was saddened by the cries of the little lake. Gathering its large white petticoat the Cedar came near the little lake.

-What is wrong with you now?--The Cedar asked the water, which was becoming a puddle, because of its incessant crying.

-I don't want to be alone--said the little lake.

-Alright, then I will remain at your side" said the Cedar, the sustainer of the world.

-I don't want to be here--said the little lake.

-Alright, then you will come with me--said the Cedar.

-No, I want to be down there, close to the earth. I want to be tall. Like you--said the little lake.

--Alright, then I will lift you up to the level of my head. But only for a little while, because the wind is mischievous and I might drop you--said the Cedar.

As it could, the Mother Cedar gathered up its petticoat and bent over to take the little lake in its arms. Carefully, because it is the mother, the sustainer of the world, the Cedar, placed the little lake on the crown of its head. The Mother Cedar moved slowly, being careful not to spill one drop of water of the lake, because the Mother Cedar could see that the little lake was very thin.

From above the little lake exclaimed:

--It is such a joy being up here! Take me to see the world! I want to see all of it!

--The world is very large, little girl, and you can fall from up there--said the Cedar.

--I don't care! Take me!--the little Lake insisted and it pretended to cry.

The Mother Cedar did not want the little lake to cry itself so much, so it began to walk, very straight, with her on its head. Since then the women have learned to walk with a pitcher full of water on the head, so that not a drop falls. Like the Mother Cedar walk the women of the jungle when they bring the water from the brook. With a straightened back, their head raised, their step like clouds in the summer. That is how the woman in the mountain walks when she is taking the water which heals.

The mother Cedar was good at walking, because in those days the trees were not stationary. They walked from one place to another, making children and filling the world with trees. But the wind was around there, whistling with boredom. So it saw the Mother Cedar and wanted to play by lifting its petticoats with a slap. But the Cedar became angry and said:

--Be still, wind! Don't you see that I have upon my head a stubborn and weepy lake?

Then the wind finally saw the little lake, who peered at it from the curly crown of the Cedar. The wind thought the little lake was pretty and decided to flirt with it. So the wind rose up to the head of the Cedar and began to speak pretty words in the ear of the little lake. The little lake quickly preened itself and said to the wind:

--If you take me around the world, then I will go with you!

The wind didn't think twice. It made a horse of clouds and put the little lake on the rump and took the little lake away, so quickly that the Mother Cedar did not even notice when the little lake was taken from her head.

The little lake travelled for a good long time with the wind. And the wind told the little lake how pretty it was, how darned cute it was, that any thirst would be quenched with the water of the little lake, that anyone would love sinking inside her, and many other things were said by the wind in order to convince the little lake to make love in a corner of the dawn. And the little lake believed all that was said to her and each time they passed a puddle of water or a lake, the little lake took advantage of its reflection and fixed its wet hair and blinked her liquid eyes and made flirtatious features out of the little waves on her round face.

But the little lake only wanted to go from one end of the world to the other and nothing about making love in a corner of the dawn. The wind became bored and took her very high and shied away with a loud neigh and threw the little lake and the little lake began falling but since it was so high it took much time and surely it would have hurt itself if some stars had not caught sight of it and hooked it to their points. Seven stars took it by the sides, and like a sheet, raised it once again into the sky. The little lake was pale because it was so frightened of falling. And since she no longer wanted to return to the earth, she asked to stay with the stars.

--Alright--said the stars--but you will have to come with us wherever we go.

--Yes--answered the little lake--I will go with you.

But the little lake was saddened to always take the same route and she began to cry again. Her crying awoke the gods and they went to see what was happening or where the crying came from and they saw the little lake, being pulled by the seven stars, crossing the night. When they learned the story, the gods were angry because they had not made lakes so they could wander in the sky, but so that they stayed on earth. They went to see the little lake and said to it:

--You will no longer be a lake. Lakes do not live in the sky. But since we cannot take you down, then you will remain here. But we will call you "moon" and your punishment, because you are vain and a flirt, will be to reflect the well where the light is put away on earth.

Apparently, the gods had put away the light inside the earth and had made a large round hole so that whenever the light and the spirit diminished in the stars they could come and drink there. So the moon has no light, it is only a mirror, and when it appears full, its front reflects the great hole filled with light where the stars drink. Mirror of light, that is what the moon is. So whenever the moon strolls in front of a lake, the mirror looks in a mirror. And even so the moon is never happy or angry, it is the troublemaker...

The gods also punished the Mother Cedar for being such a pamperer. They no longer allowed it to walk from one place to the other, and they gave it the world to carry, and doubled the thickness of its skin so it would not respond to any crying it might hear. Since then, the Cedar has skin of stone and stands without moving. If the Cedar moves even a little the world will fall.

--So it happened--said Old Man Antonio--Since then the moon reflects the light which is stored inside the Earth. That is why when it finds a lake, the moon stops to fix its hair and its face. That is why whenever women pass a mirror, they stop to look at themselves. That was a gift from the gods; to each woman was given a piece of moon, so they could fix their hair and their face and so they would not want to travel and climb to the sky.

Old Man Antonio stopped, but the wind did not, the waves continued to threaten the little boat. But I said nothing. Not because I was reflecting upon the words of Old Man Antonio, but because I was sure, that if I opened my mouth, I would expel even my liver onto the agitated mirror in which the moon rehearses its flirtatiousness...



~Subcomandante Marcos

http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/mexico/ezln/marcos_mexico_mirror_jun95.html

Flute Clan

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=895341

“People hurried past as if this were one more urban annoyance, but I was captivated. Here was a man making music with a leaf, and not just the semblance of melody -- he had intonation, vibrato, dynamics and emotion. He was a leaf maestro.”
John Burnett
Leaf-blowing technique
Carlos Garcia
photo: John Burnett, NPR News

"I play the best I can for the people," Garcia told Burnett when they first met in 2001. "For me, when I play it is a prayer to God."

Passersby at the Zocalo
Carlos Garcia
photo: John Burnett, NPR News

"God gave me the ability to do this. Not everyone can do it," Carlos said in our first interview. "I play the best I can for the people. For me, when I play it is a prayer to God."

Troupe Surge

My friends don't think i am crazy
or they know i am...
I howl with the moon, not at it.


In these days of Corporate Democracy and Media Wars

Fresh Air is needed

as Honest dialogue becomes more precious than diamonds or jade.

And so the Creator has sent us...

A Team



"In 2007 a crackhead commando unit was sent to prison by a military coup for a crime they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire: THE A-TEAM."

featuring:
Indigenous Grandmothers... at least one from each continent.
Indigenous Children... at least one boy and girl from each continent.
Lee "Scratch" Perry
the Dalai Lama
Nelson Mandela
a Jewish woman
a Palestinian woman
a Nazi
a Ninja
a Cowboy and an Indian
Conan O'Brien
anyone from Al Jazeera
Oprah Winfrey
Ellen DeGeneres
Stephen Colbert
Howard Stern
Subcomandante Marcos
the Queen of England
the Tsar of Russia
the Emporer of China
Rupert Murdoch
the Queen of the Tinkers
Julia Butterfly
a Muslim
Osama Bin Laden
the Pope
a Christian
President George Bush

and me.

You don't have to hire us even.

Just let us have a live online conversation about how to bring peace to earth

and not end it until noone wants to talk anymore.

...even if only 3 of the people on that list participate it would still help more than faith in our current future does.

...and it would help alot to let anyone hear it that wants to.

What are the impediments to this meeting of the minds?

nothing more than Commercial interruptions.

Beautiful Babylon Babies Unite !!!

This Blog existed after Bush II "the lesser" stole 2 elections, before Google ate Blogger,

This Blog existed after Bush II "the lesser" stole 2 elections, before Google ate Blogger,
Love Trumps hate.

Hits of the Month

Poetic HyperLinks Defeating the Impossibilities of Peace

Also sprach Zarathustra to the brothasistahs lost out in the woods…
Rolling stones and hurricanes prime us for the rapid eye movement of whose dream?
A stairway to the dark side of the moon reveals an orchestrated King
singing the blues while sexual pistols whip Jesus’ son.
Who’s influence weens us?
Me and my friends gratefully raged against the machine for three days
in the shadow of the valley of the dead
so big brother and company held us down while the wind cried
nothing to be gained here (except copied rights),
Then a questing tribe of beastly boys found a digable plant
where a buffalo soldier picked up a Gideon’s bible from the Godfather
in joe’s garage (or was it in one of 200 motels?)
Anyway, on a Holiday, the pinball wizard boy (Billie)
followed his heart and stopped pretending he was the king of the little plastic castles
while education, missed in the house of the naked apes, evolved and mutated
into and with ~ Nature Art Love Truth ~ and we do too…
And somewhere over the rainbow dancing fools send clowns and purple rain
into imagine nations where everything is now sacred
and there are no more public enemies or rusted Roots or minor threats
or bad brains or busted rhymes or widespread panic
and everyone can read the hieroglyphics on the wall
and we are all refugees of courtney’s love attaining nirvana….
But then again, you’re so vain, you probly think this poem’s about you-
we are everywhere and we cannot be beaten
it’s all over now baby blue, all we need is Love
Legalize It