Time lapse sequences of photographs taken with a special low-light 4K-camera by the crew of expedition 28 & 29 onboard the International Space Station, 2011. Edited by Michael König; more details here. (Thanks, Robin!)
November 13, 2011
Timelapse of Earth
Occupy Portland Supporters "Too Big to Jail"
Watching Occupy Portland livestream. The mayor had decreed the eviction of the camp tonite, but 7,000 Portlanders came out in support of the occupiers. Police are overwhelmed (so far).
(Image thanks to Occupy Portland livestream.)
UPDATE: Observers report that at one point, the crowd chanted to police, "You're sexy, you're cute. Take off your riot suit!"
FURTHER UPDATE: AS OF 4PM the next day (Sun.), the police are back, determined to clear park; media have been evicted; police have announced they WILL use gas and projectiles if necessary.
Further FURTHER UPDATE: (9PM Sun.) The park has been cleared, but protesters are holding a General Assembly nearby to discuss where to reconvene, etc.
Occupy Dallas: Artists for Teachers, Teachers for Arts March
Maybe 50 protesters, not bad for Dallas, considering the camp conducts marches daily, so there's probably a certain burn-out rate.
It's hard to imagine any actual crime occurring in or near the camp, as alleged, given that our march was surveilled by at least eight cops in or on 5 vehicles, wielding still and video cameras – nearly one cop per each half-doz. protesters! If only they watched the bankers so well.
By the way, the camp was (again) immaculate.
Photos by Ben Britt (thanks, Ben!)
November 12, 2011
The Art Guys Strike Back
Received today:
“No Show”
a non-exhibition featuring nothing at all by Seth Mittag
at
icetsuoH Contemporary Museum of Modern (iCMM)
This non-exhibition will not open on Tuesday, November 15, 2001, 7-11 p.m.
Said The Art Guys, icetsuoH Curators of Modern and Contemporary Activities, “Well, Seth was going to do a show but then he got too busy and had to cancel so we thought that rather than canceling the show, which sounds so, like negative, you know, we decided that we should press forward and go ahead and do this non-show.”
Said Seth Mittag, “I have nothing to do with this.”
For less information, contact icetsuoH Contemporary Museum of Modern
713-409-4750
http://www.theartguys.com/icetsuoH.html
November 11, 2011
Artists for Teachers to March with Occupy Dallas
"Occupy Dallas . . . together with Creative Factory Occupy Dallas . . . will be hosting a peaceful march on November 12th . . . .
"The march will serve the purpose of [raising] awareness [of] the effects [of] Texas budget cuts . . . on Dallas area teachers and also [on] the arts programs that our children attend. . . . We stand in support of artists and teachers who have helped fill the gaps in education that our government has created.
"The public is welcome to join us at City Hall Park [that's behind City Hall] on November 12th [tomorrow!] at 10:00am. The march will begin at 11:00 am. We will proceed to the Arts District, march along Flora Street and return to City Hall Park where local musicians and visual artists will share their gifts with us from 1pm-4pm."
(Thanks, Lizzy! Edited for length.) Starts behind City Hall. Be there!
Three Points About the Alleged Problems at Occupy Camps:
If the camps are in fact drawing more trouble-makers into a central location, they should generally be easier to find and police there, not harder. What's happening is probably not so much that the camps are creating problems as that they are making more visible the failures of the police and society at large to cope with trouble-makers – or poverty and the like in general.
2. The second point is just a reminder that incidents of violence almost certainly come not from bona fide Occupy protesters but from agents provocateurs, criminals, or anarchists et al. trying to exploit the situation for their own ends.
3. In ALL cases, the solution is NOT to restrict the First Amendment rights of bona fide protesters. The solution is to police the trouble-makers and help the poor.
(Alternatively, since it's the protesters who are the main victims of the alleged crimes or problems, why not let them decide which they'd prefer, to suffer the problems or to have their rights curtailed? Since we're so keen on deregulation and letting individuals suffer the consequences of their own choices . . . . )
*Here are a couple of recent photos of one of these alleged breeding grounds (the Dallas camp; and when I was there, I did not see the least sign of trash or disorder), as well as some links to documented instances of the use of agents provocateurs by agencies in the U.S.
(And P.S.: If Dallas officials think the Occupy camp is a problem, they should have shut down the Texas State Fair decades ago!)
November 9, 2011
Now Online:
A piece I wrote that was published in the hard copy journal of true stories, Fray magazine, here. Illustration by Mal Jones (see more by Mal in his Flickerstream).
The piece is excerpted from a longer work-in-progress, Diary of the Dead.*
As fellow-contributor Jarrett Liotta put it, "I'm happy to get my Fray copies, which have a retail value of $60. (That's a lot of money in the Sudan.)"
Contributors other than me have written for The New York Times, Wired, Salon, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, Esquire, Bust, et al., so I felt honored to be included. The quarterly zine is edited by JPG co-founder Derek Powazek.
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* I picked that title long ago and wasn't going to give it up just because a cr&ppy movie came along and used it later.