(Thanks, Ben!) More Maru vs. variously-sizes boxes at mugumogu's channel.
April 24, 2012
Many too small boxes and Maru.
April 19, 2012
Ideas
. . . it occurred to me recently that perhaps life's a pendulum not so much between pain and boredom, as I understand Schopenhauer wrote, but, at least in the bigger picture, between consciousness and oblivion (both, in my experience, having their merits).
Which may just be another way of saying what I've believed for some time, that the life of the universe is driven by entropy and syntropy, with first one and then the other predominating.
Based on what I see here on Earth, it looks to me like we're on the entropic swing toward greater consciousness (i.e., greater disorder in the physical world {per the second law of thermodynamics} and greater order in the abstract world of information and consciousness).
And as Yeats wrote, "All things fall and are built again, / And those that build them again are gay."
I'm also starting to wonder if all of reality is inter-dimensionally fractal.
April 16, 2012
May 1st: General Strike
April 15, 2012
New Project
Provisionally called the OccuLibrary, instigated by me and Lizzy Wetzel. Blog at OccuLibrary.blogspot.com.
April 14, 2012
OccuLibrary Project Debut Tonight
At the The Fallus Dart Air, 5 - 9PM, Shamrock Hotel
4312 Elm St., Dallas between Peak and Carroll (more details at the link): GlamROccuLibrarymentary Trailer Shoot 1 (2012), by me and Lizzy Wetzel, with performances by Sally Glass and George Quartz.
The Fallas Dart Air also includes works by Kristen Cochran, Lanie Delay, Vince Jones, Kirsten Macy, Margaret Meehan, Ludwig Schwarz, Marjorie Schwarz, Edward Setina, Lizzy Wetzel, Lily Hanson, Peter Ligon, Marianne Newsom, Brian Ryden, Noah Simblist, Sunny Sliger, and Saul Waranch.
April 8, 2012
R.I.P. Thomas Kincade
(Thanks, Paul!) More customized paintings at Something Awful.
Occupiers & Others Preparing for General Strike May 1; Noam Chomsky Endorses 99% Spring
Back in the 70's, experts believed that the improvements possible through technology would increase worker productivity to the point that the 40-hour work week would inevitably shrink to 35 or less, and that we'd all have more leisure while enjoying the same or a better standard of living.
Part of that prediction came true: worker productivity in the U.S has exploded since then. Yet instead of having more leisure and greater wealth, our inflation-adjusted incomes have actually dropped, even while our work week has increased to 50 hours and more, and even though, in most families now, both parents work.
What happened? If you read this blog, you already have an idea (e.g., see here or here).
May 1, a holiday in many countries, is the annual commemoration of the 1886 Haymarket Massacre in Chicago, when Chicago police fired on workers during a General Strike for the eight-hour workday. Now, OWS, Occupy Los Angeles, Occupy Chicago, Occupy Oakland, other General Assemblies, Labor organizers, immigrants’ rights groups, artists, faith leaders, and others are preparing for a General Strike on May 1, calling for all of us to take the day away from school and the workplace, to show that we will not continue to accept corporate and governmental systems that exploit the many in order to enrich the few.
More info on the May 1 General Strike here and here.
"99% Spring" is a congruent but separate effort – see my previous post here; more here, here, and here – which has now been endorsed by Noam Chomsky: