 Line drawing on the 1978 Poco album Legend, drawing by Hugh Macleod in last week's post Blue Pen, New Yorker cartoon by Alex Gregory (I'm wearing a sweatshirt with his famous blogging dog cartoon as I write this), logos for purpletrunk.com gallery and a tail we could wag pet supplies.
Art & Culture
Less is More: I'm growing increasingly aware of simple
art, its elegance, its power in conveying a message and capturing the
attention of readers and (increasingly) online viewers. Five examples
of this are above, four of them recent. In each, just a few lines are
used to convey character, emotion, attitude, strength, humour, passion.
I know this is not easy, but it's a skill more of us could stand to
learn. But how? I've looked in vain for online training in line
drawing. Anyone have any ideas?
The Most Inspiring Novels: Men vs. Women: The UK Guardian has just compiled the results of a survey of men's choices of most inspiring novels (last year they surveyed women's choices).
The lists are utterly different. Perhaps not surprisingly, I'm not much
impressed with either list (my list would have to include Ishmael or
Story of B, The White Bone, Natural Selection, and Riddley Walker),
though I like the women's list better. Thanks to Fouro for the link.
Doc Searls on the Morality of Business: Some interesting thoughts from Doc over at Tim O'Reilly's blog on how generosity in business is natural and essential.
It's not about reciprocity or altruism -- it's about being
authentically human, something that is terribly difficult in most
large, traditional organizations.
Environment
Breakfasting on Valvoline: In the spirit of The Oil We Eat, Chad Heeter tracks down
the sources of the all the things that went into producing,
transporting and preserving his healthy breakfast, and discovers that
the energy expended, calorie-wise, is 7-10 times what goes into his
tummy.
Techie Stuff
Listen to Your Blog by Synthesized Podcast: A new free service called Talkr creates
voice synthesis podcasts of your blog, and allows users to 'subscribe'
to up to three blogs using this mechanism. Setup is a bit cumbersome,
but my blog is now up. The voice 'reading' it is female, pleasant and
natural-sounding, but 'she' has trouble with contractions. It's not
clear to me if or how these podcasts can be listed in podcast
directories. A novelty for now, but I think this has legs. Thanks to Tom Munneke for the link.
US Politics
Iraq Heads Into Civil War: As I predicted, Iraq is now headed inexorably towards civil war. Not only is the quagmire deepening, but according to the NYT, "Iraq is becoming a country that America should be ashamed to support,
let alone occupy. In its capital, thugs kidnap and torture innocent civilians with
impunity, then murder them for their religious beliefs. The rights of
women are evaporating. The head of the government is the ally of a
radical anti-American cleric who leads a powerful private militia that
is behind much of the sectarian terror." If you're not convinced, read it from someone living there, River at Baghdad Burning,
where the 'government' is now telling citizens not to let the police in
unless they're accompanied by occupying forces, because the police
force is so thick with murderous sectarian militia. Murder victims are
now being dumped in the streets with holes drilled in their skulls,
just to ratchet up the fear a little more. And George Packer in the New
Yorker reports on the Lesson of Tal Afar:
If you really want to win the peace, you have put huge numbers, effort,
patience and infrastructure investment into listening to the people and
responding to their needs and concerns, as exemplary US military
commander Colonel HR McMaster has done in the Tal Afar region. The
cost? Trillions of dollars over generations, tens of thousands of
likely US military and civilian deaths as they face the same risks that
ordinary Iraqis face every day. Is Bush (or anyone else) prepared to
incur that cost for an honourable peace? You know the answer to that.
Civil war is inevitable, and US presence now is merely a useless
provocation, a target for frustration, and a source of arms and money
that actually helps the various insurgencies. Barry Posen in the Boston Review tells it like it is.
A bloody, extended civil war that could expand to consume the entire
Middle East, or a staggeringly expensive, risky, generations-long
investment in building a new society in Iraq. That's the choice. And
it's all on the shoulders of the Cheney-Bush regime. (Thanks to deconsumption for the Baghdad Burning link).
Letter-Writing on Coal and Abortion Rights: Coop America
has a new campaign to try to counter Big Coal's efforts to exploit the
growing energy crisis to wreck the environment even more. And NARAL
is trying to get a bill introduced that would guarantee abortion rights
to US women, taking the issue out of the hands of the courts once and
for all. |