awake, misguided

“One of the great liabilities of history is that all to many people fail to remain awake through great periods of social change. Every society has its protectors of the status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. But today our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change. The large house in which we live demands that we transform this world-wide neighborhood into a world-wide brotherhood. Together we must learn to live as brothers or together we will be forced to perish as fools.”

“When scientific power outruns moral power, we end up with guided missles and misguided men.”

– MLK Jr.

Transom Shows: Voice of Youth: The Night I Met Cornel West

This radio piece is pretty awesome and its pretty interesting to hear someone articulate pretty reasonable ambivalence to someone that me, and most of the folks that I know go kind of gahgah over. 

Transom Shows: Voice of Youth: The Night I Met Cornel West:

19-year-old Laquoia Simmons had a big night a while back: she met and interviewed Professor Cornel West, the famous ‘interpreter of the African-American experience,’ advocate for social justice, philosopher and critic. She reflects on her trip to Sonoma State University, and discusses what it was like to be an ‘at-risk’ young woman meeting a writer who writes so much about the so-called ‘at-risk’ population.

game

I stumbled across this random blog post when I googled for “triffling” because I was curious about the spelling.  My friend once told me, half jokingly, that she thinks everyone is looking for a hustle.  Reading this piece of someone’s life, like a voyeur, I realize that I’m seriously outclassed when it comes to deviousness.  From the blog:

I say “Why do you keep him around, if you know he shady?”

She says “Think about this. If the police busted my house today, Who are they most likely to believe? A girl with no serious record or this dude that just got out of jail and is on probation.

I look at her in awe. She says “Its all part of the game. Even when people think they are winning and getting over, they are not. They see me as a dumb ass and think I dont notice this shit, when everything I do is a part of a plan.

disaster song descriptions

For Kevey, initially, for some kind of demo liner notes, eventually.

Research

This song is about skateboarding, place, ownership, and memory.

Who owns a place?  Is it the person who holds the deed, title, or monetary investments, or is it those who occupy the place, us it, redefine it, develop an intimate relationship with it and invest their lives in that place?  Certainly, its a question that kids ask themselves as they’re getting kicked out of skate spots, but more fundamentally, and significantly, its a question that’s relevent to communities like the strong working-class communities that once existed near the Victorian Village and Harrison West neighborhoods of Columbus, Ohio; or many communities in New Orleans who have been forced to passively wait while the decision about whether their community will be allowed to be rebuilt is made by others.  When a place or community ceases to exist physically, what role does memory hold in maintaining some sense of ownership of a place?  Who is entitled to hold that memory?

Lightning Strikes 

This song is about being honest in your relationships, romantic or otherwise.  Its about how a big part of that is being honest with yourself about those relationships and allowing yourself to be happy and excited about them even if that makes you feel vulnerable and scared at the same time.  Its about expressing all of these feelings to the people you care about, and how realizing the importance of these things and actually coming to be able to do them can be a long and painful process.

The Human Contradiction

This pair of titles gets their title from some books by Octavia Butler (RIP) poses the human contradiction as being humanity’s intelligence coupled with their hierarchical nature and describes this contradiction as being ultimately destructive.  This made me think of another human contradiction – humanity’s ability to survive great hardship, tragedy, and oppression only to repeat those horrors.  The first song is about wanting to see an end to this cycle, even if it means an end to humanity and the second song is about finding hope even in spite of this contradiction.

This Is Where We’re From   

This song is about how so many punk kids come from bland suburban and exurban communities and ultimately migrate en-masse from those communities to other places.  Its about how coming from a place devoid of culture creates a seperation from one’s personal history.  Its about struggling to find a place in a new community that feels real and the tendency to fetishize the idea of “community” and in particular communities that newcomers might be playing a role in destroying.

Death At An Early Age

This is about the segregation and inequality that still exists in American education.  Its also about how people affected by social problems are often only regarded as victims.

Shut the Fuck Up

This is about those in power saying things that underline how their reality is completely out of touch with that of so many others.  Its about wishing that these people would at least have smarts to be tactful and silent as they fuck up people’s lives, but recognizing that saying horrible things at least reminds us who we can’t trust.
New Song

This song is about finding hope in shared experience.

potshots

When my friend Leanne was passing through town last month, we went for a short hike around Lake Griffey.  While we were hiking, she mentioned that she really liked a comic called Potshots and that she was disappointed that her local paper had stopped carrying the comic.  Luckily, the comics are available on the web.  Leanne isn’t super internet-connected, so I offered to compile some of the potshots and send them to her in the mail.  I used wget to download them, but I needed to find a way to print the images many-to-a-page.

I eventually came upon using ImageMagick‘s montage command.  This worked pretty well for me:

C:\Documents and Settings\ghing\Desktop\potshots>U:\ImageMagick-6.2.6-Q16\montag
e.exe -tile 2×5 -adjoin *.gif -geometry 300×190 sheet.png

Then I could just view and print the composite images in firefox, provided I made my margins small and zoomed in first.

Potshots is pretty interesting.  The artist who draws them was once called “history’s only full time, professional published eppigramist.” The black and white illustrations with clever phrases definitely have this feeling of antiquity to them.  The sayings have a strange tone as well, that can be heartfealt but also sarcastic.   So, they come off as a weird hybrid of Family Circle and Edward Gorey.

monday

I hit the snooze button on my phone alarm when I heard the rain pouring down and realized that I wasn’t going to be skating with Kevey this morning.

So, I woke up late and my day fealt rushed and frustrating from on out, never quite getting enough sunlight to feel awake and alive, though the warmth was nice.

The sickly chick didn’t make it through the night, sadly.

podcast mix:

punk stuff I want to hear more of:

  • contrepetera (or is it contrapatera ?)
  • eskorbuto
  • lost world
  • ekkaia
  • ballast

I sat in on Corinna and Riley’s radio show, the Manion companion, trying to learn a few things on the way to getting a show myself, and it was really interesting to see the ease with which they did the show, even with some minor difficulties.  They both have this very interesting, varried, and nonchalant taste in music that is both compelling and intimidating.  It was only the second time I got to hear their show.

I thought for sure she was dead

She was just lying in a heap on the bedding, I couldn’t detect any breath. Her sisters were milling all about her, stepping over her and on her, as if she wasn’t there. Dylan and I had opened up the cage to feed all of the chicks when we noticed her lifeless form just lying there, looking all strange and small as the other chicks, looking large and vital milled around complacently. There was that sick feeling of not knowing what to do. “Is she dead,” I asked, “for sure?” as Dylan gently probed at her feathered body.

Its the same feeling i had that summer at the Sweet Little Dude house when the random girl who nobody knew and had come into town with the strange boy that everyone regarded with uncertainty and a bit of caution, the pair in the middle of some confused journey, a whirlwind of love and madness, was standing outside of the house sort of pacing and looking at the ground. “You need to watch her and make sure she doesn’t leave or hurt herself,” my friend whispered as she went to call another friend to figure out what to do. Its the same feeling I had driving around a town I barely knew, trying not to crash or get even more lost while talking to a friend, miles away in another city, on my mobile phone asking her what to do. And after I hung up, the feeling of being half worried about not quite knowing how to get back to the house, and being half relieved that being lost meant a few more minutes of space from the tension and uncertainty at the house, and the concentration on trying to recognize landmarks meant a break from my imagination painting sad pictures of the scene that might be playing out when I arrived back at the house. And all these times, and all those same feelings of being scared and confused and feeling young and inexperienced and stupid, aren’t quite as bad as hearing that part of you that says, “you don’t have to deal with this.”

After the moment of paralyzed inaction that seemed to last an eternity, we decided that we would make a partition in the box to keep her safe from being accosted by the other chicks. She had a congenitally fucked-up beak, and we speculated that it put her at a severe disadvantage when it came to competing for food and water with the other 22 chicks. I went outside to look for supplies to build a partition. When I came back into the house, Eric was standing in the kitchen, holding the crooked-beaked chick in his hands. Dylan was giving her water with a little dropper when she jumped out of his hands to the floor. There was a horrifyed collective gasp as she hit the floor, but we were all relieved when she started walking around, all kind of puffed out, so unlike the limp flat way we had found her.

We eventually took a milk crate and put it in the chick box with her own food and water. Hopefully, with the extra space, food and water, she’ll make it.

I feel like if I told all this to a seasoned hand with livestock, they would think it was funny. All that fuss for one chick. Reading the literature that came with the chicks, it felt like there was this expectation that they wouldn’t all make it to adulthood. This is a strange thing, to think about raising things that move around and make a comotion, with the same statistical, cut your losses mentality that one would apply to the recently started seeds that occupy the other part of the living room.

I feel like the idea of nurturing things is suddenly all around me. The chicks, the seeds, Var and his partner, who are putting out the new Defiance, Ohio record just had twins. When I saw Sarah, who volunteers at pages, today, it was the first time she looked pregnant. It was only a week or so ago that I had overheard her telling some folks about her pregnancy and I was struck at how oblivious I had been to this thing that, for her and Chris, had to be the hugest thing ever. And watching Oliver with the girls, as Florence sits at the dinner table complaining about the awesome food that Oliver just made being too spicy, I realize that when you have kids, you don’t even get to contemplate the thought that “you don’t have to deal with this.” Or maybe you do, but the pressure, and the uncertainty, and the sickness you feel when part of you suspects you lack the fortitude to figure out what to do is just that much more extreme.

After the whole chick incident, I opened up ipodder and clicked randomly on a podcast I had downloaded.  It was an edition of WGBH’s Morning Stories, where a woman talks about the birds she had know and loved.

riseup.net needs your help

From an e-mail sent to riseup users:

The people behind riseup.net consist of about ten active collective members and volunteers at any given time. Unfortunately, we work on riseup.net in the small bits of free time we have available: after school or work, on the weekends, late at night. This is not enough!
Currently, our workload is enough for at least ten full time workers. We do have two people who work full time on riseup.net, and receive a small stipend of $300 per month, which is not enough to survive.

We have a dream that some day the community support for riseup.net will match the time and resources it takes to keep riseup.net running. If you have put in a help ticket recently, we apologize for the delay: we receive about five hundred questions a month, and are currently working hard to catch up.

Most people are familiar with our email and mailing list services, but we have many other exciting projects going on behind the scenes, including: a tech collective incubation project, a community colocation project, free software development, and a suite of security and privacy patches.

If you believe, as we do, that liberatory social movements must have control over their own means of communication, then we invite you to run to our donation page at http://riseup.net/donate. If you live in the Global South, we ask that you do not donate to riseup.net but keep local whatever resources you have.

in solidarity,
the riseup collective

audrey lorde

I found this really nice quotation by Audrey Lorde when reading Ashanti Alston’s Beyond Nationalism, But Not Without It

“…we have been taught either to ignore our differences, or to view them as causes for separation and suspicion rather than as forces for change. Without community there is no liberation, only the most vulnerable and temporary armistice between an individual and her oppression. But community must not mean a shedding of our differences, nor the pathetic pretense that these differences do not exist. – Audre Lorde

which kind of gave me a new context for thinking about the White Anti-Racist Allies group that Megan from pages works with at IU.