A lie-filled Bush-style Conservative Party attack ad shows a bird shitting on opposition leader Stéphane Dion.
Maybe it's the time of year, but I'm afraid this week's list is decidedly heavy on political items, most of them bad news:
Is Bob Woodward Helping the CIA in Iraq?: Most
intriguing story of the week is the report that Bob Woodward knows
about a 'secret lethal special operations program' that is having
extraordinary success in Iraq. Woodward is not talking specifics, just
saying enough to sell his new book. And of course that means that
everyone who hears about this is speculating what the 'secret' might
be. The most interesting guess (from the Wired Magazine blog) is a new
DARPA 'tagging, tracking and locating' technology that allows
individual thermal 'fingerprints' to be created for identified
opponents, which satellites can then use to track their whereabouts
(and presumably bomb them) anywhere on Earth. But the comments to
this article suggest an even more intriguing possibility: That there is
no new 'secret' weapon, and Woodward has been chosen (voluntarily or
not) to virally propagate that such a 'secret' weapon exists, through
his book tour, to frighten opponents of the US occupation force into
retreat. Creating Resilient Societies:
John Robb shares my pessimism about the future of our civilization and
our capacity to make the changes needed to salvage it before it
collapses. P2P Foundation has summarized some of his recent thoughts,
that peer-to-peer connectivity might enable large-scale relocalization of economies by creating self-sufficient communities. Below the article, Jeff Vail and I chime in with our thoughts.
Lehman Brothers Collapses, CitiBank next?:Lehman has collapsed as I predicted in July.
My prediction is that CitiBank will be the next big one to fall, and
just watch the markets plummet when that happens. Why CitiBank? Wisdom
of crowds -- the employees know what's going on.
Bush-Style Right-Wing Attack Ads Work in Canada Too:
Canada is going to the polls next month, and the extreme right-wing
Conservatives, their coffers full of money from the US corporatists
ruining our environment, have borrowed the Bush/Rove campaign playbook
to launch a barrage of extremely offensive and totally dishonest attack
ads (example above) on the Liberal opposition. Unfortunately, the
tactic is working: Since the ads started, Conservative popularity has
risen from 32% to 41%, enough for a majority in Canada's absurd
first-past-the-post electoral system. The Conservatives should be
ashamed; the voters falling for this tripe even more so.
Kevin Carson's Home Raided, Writings Seized:
A book by fellow blogger Kevin Carson on labour struggle was seized
last week by Minneapolis police working with Homeland Security. So much for the last vestiges of freedom of speech
in America. Maybe someone should send a dictionary to the DHS
brownshirts so they can look up the meaning of the term "anarchist".
Democrats Capitulate on Offshore Drilling: The Obama Democrats are now supporting offshore drilling,
to suck up to ignorant public opinion and Big Oil interests. Any wonder
young people are cynical about the political process? When things get
rough and change is needed...well, let's just have more of the same instead! I'm in the process of reading archaeologist David Stuart's Anasazi America,
a speculation about how the inability and unwillingness of the Anasazi
to rein in their population explosion and unsustainable economy spelled
the end of a 700-year-long civilization when it encountered abrupt
climate change, in a way eerily similar to what we're doing on a global
scale today. And people wonder why I'm a pessimist.
Hmmm...:
Has anyone else (old enough to remember) noticed how much the current
US election campaign mirrors that of Kennedy-Nixon in 1960?
Locate a Locally-Owned Cafe, Bookstore or Theatre: An interesting first step towards a directory of locally-owned enterprises everyone can use to help restore the vitality of their local community economy. Thanks to Graham Clark in NZ for the link.
Clay Shirky on the Participative Nature of the Web: The always-brilliant Clay Shirky says that we ain't seen nothing yet:
wait until the 80% on the other side of the digital divide start to
participate fully, knowledgeably and enthusiastically in the
interactive facets of the Web. Bye bye one-way, time-fixed 'broadcast'
media. Thanks to Rod Lucier for the link.
And, for a spooky experience, Play with Spider. Thanks to Craig De Ruisseau for the link -- and for the one that follows.
And finally, from the one sentence story archive,
my favourite story (#110): "When asked to name the one person absent
from her life that she missed the most, she responded, 'The person I
hoped I'd be by this point in my life.' "
I find myself in awe of the determination a journalist
has to have simply to convey the war on terror to American readers as
it appears outside the managed version (bury the dead, cover your ass)
of U.S. military press releases. And much as I admire such reporting --
how much easier to remain embedded within the official context -- I
find myself trembling with incredulity as I read it.
The core of
this story isn’t the controversy: How many children, precisely, did we
kill this time around? This is a story of the unspeakable immensity of
death. It’s the 9/11 story still unfolding, and the only way to tell it
is to embed a prayer, a wail of parental grief, deep within the words.
Let the controversy come later, after we’ve joined the villagers, and
the world, in mourning.
And the story is also much more than
this, of course, since we’ve been killing civilians in Afghanistan and
Iraq for most of the Bush presidency. In July, we bombed another Afghan
wedding:
“Oh my God!” (the groom) was now sobbing
uncontrollably. “ I saw my bride and my family members; I saw the
pieces of their bodies scattered all over the place.” So writes Iqbal
Sapand for Information Clearinghouse, about a July 6 incident in
Nangarhar in which 52 people died (45 of them women and children).
This is how we feed the endless war, the one that’s been raging for about 6,000 years now.
[for more on the disastrous war in Afghanistan, and the military/media deceptions we are being fed about it, read Glenn Greenwald's latest column]
People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs