Daily blip : lazy

by DeusXFlorida

by dbarronoss
I dunno, monkeys just seemed appropriate.
A friend posted today that 1 in 4 mammals are endangered. Think about that.
Daily blip : random list
Things I want to read:
Art & Social Change, A Critical Reader by Charles Esche & Will Bradley
Participation, Documents of Contemporary Art by Claire Bishop
Reenchantment of Art by Suzi Gablik
Dream: Re-Imaging Progressive Politics in an Age of Fantasy by Stephen Duncombe
Conversation Pieces by Grant Kester
Mapping the Terrain: New Genres in Public Art by Suzanne Lacy
RenGen by Patricia Martin
Anyone want to do a bookswap?
Sorry I missed Thursday daily blip – I can’t figure out how to work it into the day – I leave early in the morning and am out of touch all day. Also – does anyone have opinions on the daily posting?
Daily blip : quote
Since I am hoping the new plan up for a vote is the New New Deal:
“Happiness is not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort.”
–Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Daily blip : interesting people
I have to thank my friend, Steve Lambert for introducing me to this interesting person (and I mean interesting in the good way!)
Steve is working on a book with Stephen Duncombe about artists measuring the impact of their work when they are taking on an activist role. (Is that proprietary info Steve? Let me know). Anyway, he and Stephen interviewed me and then I had a chance to wlk and talk with Stephen on the way back to the subway.
He is an activist, teacher, thinker and author. His most recent book is Dream: Re-Imaging Progressive Politics in an Age of Fantasy (its on the upcoming, books I want to read list). He’s been recognized (well, his group the Lower East Side Collective) for creative activism by the Abbie Hoffman Foundation and was a key organizer with Reclaim the Streets.
And yet, when seen in another light, there is plenty wrong with the American backyard Bar-B-Que. Public resources were channeled from healthcare, education and urban development to–quite literally–pave the way to individual home purchases in the suburbs. Burger smoke wafting into the air from a million backyards, each separated from theother by a picket fence, symbolized the atomization of the public, as around each grill a nuclear family–perhaps joined by a few close friends–acted out the bourgeois fantasy of self-sufficiency. And the Bar-B-Que does not stand alone, it is but one component in a an array of leisure activities that gobble up resources and pollute the planet; each hamburger flipped and chicken thigh basted makes an implicit argument in favor of an ecologically unsustainable lifestyle. Then there is sartorial travesty of leisure wear: grown men and women wearing clothes best suited for children at the playground: t-shirts, sneakers, and shorts or worse: track suits whose elastic waistbandexpands effortlessly to accommodate the ever-growing American girth.
…Yet the Bar-B-Que can also be recognized as an organic vision of Utopia lovingly created, or perhaps dreamed, from below. The dreams of the ideal Bar-B-Que – seemingly alone among modern Utopias – has never lead to the gulag or a death camp. There has not been, nor do we believe there ever will be, a totalitarian state of Bar-B-Que. Abstract Man may want to collectivize farms or subject their will to the Fuhrer, but everyday people want to grill.
And excerpt from Stephen Duncombe’s blog on Reality Sandwich.
Daily blip : environmental euphemism
Haze – It sounds kind of dreamy. Or sultry sometimes. Mostly it is particulate matter in the air – a hard to get rid of pollutant that causes health problems and further exacerbates severe weather. What else could we call it?
To find out more about your local haze: http://airnow.gov/
Daily Blip : Quote
Many of you know that I admire Wangari Maathai greatly. Here is a quote that I use at the bottom of my signature:
“You must not deal only with the symptoms. You have to get to the root causes by promoting environmental rehabilitation and empowering people to do things for themselves. What is done for the people without involving them cannot be sustained.”
–Wangari Maathai
daily post #2
Daily blip : Environmental Euphemism
There are a lot of words that we use to talk about some bad environmental & ecological situations that seem to sugar coat the issues. I am compiling a list. Here’s the first:
Climate Change - That’s kind of like calling Hurricanes Katrina and Ike, “alterations in the weather pattern.” What we are facing, is in reality, climate catastrophy. We are talking about massive, drastic, significant and irreversible weather patterns that will alter ecosystems on both the micro and macro scale. It is an alteration of life as we know it – happening on a meteoric time scale.
That’s daily post #1.

