I slipped on the ice last Saturday. I'd walked a mile to the library and then back, and just before I got to my house I found myself flat on my back on the sheet of ice that's been my street lately.
I wasn't even sure I could get up. But without too much pain, I managed it, and walked home, put ice on my back, and waited to see how bad it would be. I could walk and do lots of things, though it hurt, sometimes really bad. Getting into bed was torture. I had to bend the wrong angle and my lower left back screamed. Finding a prone position that didn't hurt took a while. Did I break a rib, just bruise it, or was it just sore muscle? Could I make things worse if I did the wrong thing? Some over-the-counter pain pills, ice, and I finally managed to find a position that wasn't more than a minor irritation and slept the night.
I figured it wasn't too serious because the next day I could walk and bend a little with bearable pain. But certain moves set of ied's. I started being very careful about reaching, leaning, bending, all the normal things you do a million times each day without thinking. Now I had to think about each one.
It was during this time I saw this poster Guadalupe put up on Facebook.
I'd already started noticing other people who walked tenderly and had much more compassion for them than I had before. I had an invisible pain. I didn't look any different than before I slipped, but I sure moved more gingerly.
Good health is so random. Sure, you can eat well and exercise, but a tree falls, a car veers your way, or, in Vic Fischer's case recently, a camel hears a motorcycle backfire and kicks out just as you're walking by. (He was in Rajasthan, India at the time.) Sure, I read and link to Peter's incredible Parkinson's blog, and I see how valiantly he lives his life. And then I forget again how lucky I am.
It takes a fall like this to remind me to be more aware of others' afflictions. If they act a little weird, maybe they're in serious pain. And even those people who match the definition of a 'jerk' probably have a history and/or a condition that would help us understand their behavior. (Understand isn't the same as approve.)
I did get to the doctor by Wednesday, had an x-ray, and learned I hadn't broken anything.
Just some very angry muscle. I'm clearly moving back to normal. But I hope I won't forget to stay sensitive to others who might be living their lives with a serious pain or other affliction battling them every step of the way.
The x-ray room had this miniature skeleton and I've added a little graphic to indicate the hot spot.
When people lived in small communities and knew everyone over a lifetime, they tended to know who had what ailments and accommodated (or persecuted) them. In our more anonymous worlds, we don't know the people we interact with, and don't understand who they are and how they got that way. And how quickly one's life can change from one condition to another.
Pages
- About this Blog
- AIFF 2024
- AK Redistricting 2020-2023
- Respiratory Virus Cases October 2023 - ?
- Why Making Sense Of Israel-Gaza Is So Hard
- Alaska Daily COVID-19 Count 3 - May 2021 - October 2023
- Alaska Daily COVID-19 Count - 2 (Oct. 2020-April 2021)
- Alaska Daily COVID-19 Count 1 (6/1-9/20)
- AIFF 2020
- AIFF 2019
- Graham v Municipality of Anchorage
- Favorite Posts
- Henry v MOA
- Anchorage Assembly Election April 2017
- Alaska Redistricting Board 2010-2013
- UA President Bonus Posts
- University of Alaska President Search 2015
Friday, March 14, 2014
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
The Condoms - A Short Story With A Long Commentary
[Note: This post tries to pull together ideas from different places to make sense of things that seem not to make sense. I've been tinkering with it for several days now, and while I'm still not satisfied, it's time to move on to other things. Consider this post as working notes.]
I'd like to play out a little story I imagined when I heard about it and then also talk a little history and use Jonathan Haidt's ideas about moral traits to try to understand the mental gap here.
Fred Dyson can rightfully claim that wasn't what he meant when he said "you can get things even quickly" but it's what came to mind.
His Alaska Senate page says that Fred Dyson was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, January 16, 1939. That means he's just had his 75th birthday. He went to high school in Seattle and has been married since 1966. He would have been 27. In 1966 the US was just starting to emerge from an era in which pre-marital sex was roundly condemned in mainstream culture. People didn't "live together," they "shacked up" and it was not accepted at all as it is today. The summer of love in San Francisco was a year away.
But nature has a way of overcoming social norms and sex was certainly part of many people's high school lives. But condoms were not sold over the counter. You had to ask the pharmacist for prophylactics. Birth control pills were approved only six years earlier and were still illegal in some states. For girls, pregnancy changed everything. (It still does, of course.) I remember when straight A student XX suddenly vanished from school, no explanations offered. You were disgraced, and many a young couple were quickly forced to get married. And as in XX's case, more often than not, these marriages didn't last. Roe v. Wade was still seven years off, though a couple of states were beginning to legalize abortions. Illegal abortion was a risky endeavor which hundreds of thousands of women a year undertook.
And the happy American family portrayed on shows like Ozzie and Harriet weren't exactly how things were. From Digital History:
Jonathan Haidt
I've recently become aware of the work of Jonathan Haidt who's written on morality and the human mind.
Haidt argues, in the Ted Talk video below, that to a certain extent, our minds are pre-programmed. Our environments will have an impact too, but we aren't blank slates. He argues humans come pre-programmed with five basic moral traits:
Haidt tells us more in an interview on Social Science Space. He’d been studying morality across countries and was bummed that GWB won in 2000 and 2004.
Back to Dyson
I believe that Dyson is wrong in his argument, but I think knowing the world he was raised in and knowing about Haidt's moral traits, we can at least understand how he came to say what he said. Dyson’s argument has an internal logic if you buy his basic assumptions. His respect for authority and for purity and sanctity are reinforced by group loyalty. The basis of his argument is about personal responsibility and the unfairness of having to pay for other people's birth control.
In the Social Science Space interview, Haidt describes Dyson's comments years before Dyson said them. Haidt talks about how he watched a lot of Fox news, like an ethnographic study, to understand how conservatives think. What he found back then, I think helps describe Dyson’s thinking:
My point here is not to debate Dyson. but to point out that he AND his detractors would achieve more success in the legislature for the people of Alaska, if they both acknowledged that they probably don't know everything and probably are not right about everything. (And if they did, their next election opponents would quote them in attack ads.) Dyson, I believe, strongly believes what he says and probably is just as perplexed by those attacking him as they are by what he proposed. Understanding his logic AND the values that underlie it, are the first steps to real communication and potential resolution that doesn't violate anyone's values. (No, I don't think we're as far apart as the extremists say and the media echo. Yes, I know that there will always be some people who won't be satisfied.)
Without recognizing and acknowledging that the other side probably has valid points, we deny their humanity and they ours. They aren't the enemy, and certainly not agents of Satan. Rather, each side places greater weight on different values and thus each side sees different ‘facts’ and interprets what they see differently.
Dyson sees lazy people doing frivolous things and thinks they should pay for it themselves, not using taxpayer money. Gardner sees state funded birth control as an act of compassion to poor people struggling to get by in a society tilted against them. Furthermore she believes that easy access to, and use of, birth control would lead to fewer unwanted babies and more ability for women to get an education and keep a job. She sees the immediate costs to taxpayers of supplying the birth control as cheap compared to the long term costs of dealing with kids whose parents didn’t want them and aren’t capable of responsibly raising them.
I should probably mention that my personal interactions with Sen. Dyson occurred at Alaska's political corruption trials. It turned out he was attending the trials and also reading my blog posts which he said he liked. He was polite and respectful. Another time I had to call him to ask him about a mistake he'd made when introducing Joe Miller at a political rally. He again was cordial and acknowledged he'd made an error and had confused Miller with (current Senate candidate) Dan Sullivan. These were intersections of our lives where we had some common ground. Situations where what we saw in each other was positive, despite our strong differences in other areas. And I think these intersections would allow us to converse civilly on issues where our personal values would lead us to conflicting conclusions.
I'd strongly recommend Jonathan Haidt's Ted Talk on the moral mind. It supports my approach here which some of my readers find too sympathetic to the 'bad guys.' It does what is essential to break an impasse - it changes the discussion by focusing on the process rather than the content of the impasse. It asks people to look at their underlying values and to become conscious of their behavior. [I don't see this video in my preview, so if it doesn't work, you can find it (The Moral Roots of Liberals and Conservatives) here.]
Responsibility of Politicians
I would add another aspect to this. I believe that Fred Dyson is certain that he's right. And in the United States, everyone is entitled to his opinion. But once you take the responsibility of political office, you have an obligation to represent fairly the views of as many as possible. (I know that not everyone can be satisfied.) You have a responsibility to listen to others and to seek 'the truth' rather than to simply seek a victory over those who disagree with you.
I believe that Dyson's missing a lot of the picture. Our understanding and practice of sex is very different from what it was when he was young. (And our belief of what it was when he was young is also probably flawed as the citations from digital history above suggest.)
Our differences have, perhaps, more to do with the moral standards Jonathan Haidt says we came pre-programmed with. The challenge is to test our truths, to find common ground with those who give more weight to other moral traits. Rigid, moralistic stances on either side won't lead to good legislation.
Of course, cooperating with 'the other' requires that the other is willing to also cooperate. My take on the Tea Party is that they are certain they are right as reflected in their refusal to compromise. Human history is littered with tragic stories of the suffering caused by those who believed they owned the truth and who had the political or physical power to enforce their truth.
"You can go on the internet, you can order these things by mail, . . . make phone calls, and you can get it delivered by mail, you all know that Alaska Airlines will do Goldstreak and you can get things even quickly that way if you need to. So I don’t think access is a problem, I don’t think that finance, that economics is, and my own view is that by and large sexual activity is recreation. Now if you're doing the activity for procreation, obviously birth control is counter-indicated."- Eagle River's Sen. Fred Dyson from the Legislative 360 North via the Anchorage Daily News has already received plenty of attention for this statement (plus the rest of it which you can view at the ADN link above.)
I'd like to play out a little story I imagined when I heard about it and then also talk a little history and use Jonathan Haidt's ideas about moral traits to try to understand the mental gap here.
The Condom - A Short Story
The wind whistled through the poorly insulated wooden home in a rural village off the Alaska road system. He'd come knocking a couple of hours ago, knowing her mother was away. She was excited about having a boyfriend, yet a little fearful of what it all meant. He'd brought some beer and they'd both had too much. She had refused the beer at first, but she didn't want to appear just a child. Her body responded to his hands, yet she could hear her mom warning her about getting pregnant. "We can't do this," she cried out. "We don't have any condoms."
He looked down on her and smiled. He pulled out his cell phone and called Alaska Airlines. "Goldstream me a dozen condoms," he said into the phone. Then he looked back at her, "Problem solved."
Fred Dyson can rightfully claim that wasn't what he meant when he said "you can get things even quickly" but it's what came to mind.
His Alaska Senate page says that Fred Dyson was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, January 16, 1939. That means he's just had his 75th birthday. He went to high school in Seattle and has been married since 1966. He would have been 27. In 1966 the US was just starting to emerge from an era in which pre-marital sex was roundly condemned in mainstream culture. People didn't "live together," they "shacked up" and it was not accepted at all as it is today. The summer of love in San Francisco was a year away.
But nature has a way of overcoming social norms and sex was certainly part of many people's high school lives. But condoms were not sold over the counter. You had to ask the pharmacist for prophylactics. Birth control pills were approved only six years earlier and were still illegal in some states. For girls, pregnancy changed everything. (It still does, of course.) I remember when straight A student XX suddenly vanished from school, no explanations offered. You were disgraced, and many a young couple were quickly forced to get married. And as in XX's case, more often than not, these marriages didn't last. Roe v. Wade was still seven years off, though a couple of states were beginning to legalize abortions. Illegal abortion was a risky endeavor which hundreds of thousands of women a year undertook.
And the happy American family portrayed on shows like Ozzie and Harriet weren't exactly how things were. From Digital History:
[Note: I haven't independently verified this, but it appears to be a solid source, put up by the College of Education at the University of Houston. The quote is just a small part of a long piece titled, "Does the American Family Have a History? Family Images and Realities."]
- It was only in the 1920s that, for the first time, a majority of American families consisted of a breadwinner-husband, a home-maker wife, and children attending school.
- The most rapid increase in unwed pregnancies took place between 1940 and 1958, not in the libertine sixties.
- The defining characteristics of the 1950s family--a rising birth rate, a stable divorce rate, and declining age of marriage--were historical aberrations, out of line with long term historical trends.
- Throughout American history, most families have needed more than one breadwinner to support themselves.
Jonathan Haidt
I've recently become aware of the work of Jonathan Haidt who's written on morality and the human mind.
Haidt argues, in the Ted Talk video below, that to a certain extent, our minds are pre-programmed. Our environments will have an impact too, but we aren't blank slates. He argues humans come pre-programmed with five basic moral traits:
- (Keeping the vulnerable from harm)
- Fairness/reciprocity (Do onto others . . .)
- In-group loyalty
- Authority/respect (and the need to keep order in groups)
- Purity/sanctity
“If you want the truth to stand clear before you, never be for or against. The struggle between ‘for’ and ‘against’ is the mind’s worst disease”[Looking at the link above the quote, I suspect this is like offering "light is speedy" to represent Einstein's theories. Here's a link to the poem that this quote seems to come from.]
Haidt tells us more in an interview on Social Science Space. He’d been studying morality across countries and was bummed that GWB won in 2000 and 2004.
“So when I was invited to give a talk to the Charlottesville Democrats in 2004, right after the election, I said ‘Alright, well let me take this cross-cultural theory that I’ve got, and apply it to Left and Right, as though they’re different cultures.’ And boy, it worked well! I expected to get eaten alive: I was basically telling this room full of Democrats that the reason they lost is not because of Karl Rove, and sorcery and trickery, it’s because Democrats, or liberals, have a narrower set of moral foundations: they focus on fairness and care, and they don’t get the more groupish or visceral, patriotic, religious, hierarchical values that most Americans have.In the split between conservatives and liberals (that the media's reporting of both reinforces and aggravates) both sides move to group loyalty and attack those in their groups who would talk about cooperation with outsiders. We can see Tea Party candidates doing this with establishment Republicans. But liberals also play this game. I'm regularly chastised for not thoroughly condemning 'the enemy' as in this post.
Back to Dyson
I believe that Dyson is wrong in his argument, but I think knowing the world he was raised in and knowing about Haidt's moral traits, we can at least understand how he came to say what he said. Dyson’s argument has an internal logic if you buy his basic assumptions. His respect for authority and for purity and sanctity are reinforced by group loyalty. The basis of his argument is about personal responsibility and the unfairness of having to pay for other people's birth control.
In the Social Science Space interview, Haidt describes Dyson's comments years before Dyson said them. Haidt talks about how he watched a lot of Fox news, like an ethnographic study, to understand how conservatives think. What he found back then, I think helps describe Dyson’s thinking:
"I would watch Fox News shows, and at first it was kind of offensive to me, but once I began to get it, to see ‘Oh I see how this interconnects’ and ‘Oh, you know if you really care about personal responsibility, and if you’re really offended by leeches and mooches and people who do foolish things, then want others to bail them out, yeah, I can see how that’s really offensive, and if you believe that, I can see how the welfare state is one of the most offensive things ever created’. So, I started actually seeing, you know, what both sides are really right about: certain threats and problems. And once you are part of a moral team that binds together, but it blinds you to alternate realities, it blinds you to facts that don’t fit your reality."So, where Dyson sees people who haven’t taking personal responsibility for their lives and doesn’t see why the tax payer should pay for them to have sex with state funded contraceptives, Senator Berta Gardner (who responded to Dyson in the Senate committee) sees poor women as unfairly treated, in a society that structurally disadvantages them. It’s not that poor people are lazy and don’t take responsibility, it’s that society’s structure has doomed most of them to low paying jobs where they work long and hard, yet still earn too little to live even the most basic American Dream life.
My point here is not to debate Dyson. but to point out that he AND his detractors would achieve more success in the legislature for the people of Alaska, if they both acknowledged that they probably don't know everything and probably are not right about everything. (And if they did, their next election opponents would quote them in attack ads.) Dyson, I believe, strongly believes what he says and probably is just as perplexed by those attacking him as they are by what he proposed. Understanding his logic AND the values that underlie it, are the first steps to real communication and potential resolution that doesn't violate anyone's values. (No, I don't think we're as far apart as the extremists say and the media echo. Yes, I know that there will always be some people who won't be satisfied.)
Without recognizing and acknowledging that the other side probably has valid points, we deny their humanity and they ours. They aren't the enemy, and certainly not agents of Satan. Rather, each side places greater weight on different values and thus each side sees different ‘facts’ and interprets what they see differently.
Dyson sees lazy people doing frivolous things and thinks they should pay for it themselves, not using taxpayer money. Gardner sees state funded birth control as an act of compassion to poor people struggling to get by in a society tilted against them. Furthermore she believes that easy access to, and use of, birth control would lead to fewer unwanted babies and more ability for women to get an education and keep a job. She sees the immediate costs to taxpayers of supplying the birth control as cheap compared to the long term costs of dealing with kids whose parents didn’t want them and aren’t capable of responsibly raising them.
I should probably mention that my personal interactions with Sen. Dyson occurred at Alaska's political corruption trials. It turned out he was attending the trials and also reading my blog posts which he said he liked. He was polite and respectful. Another time I had to call him to ask him about a mistake he'd made when introducing Joe Miller at a political rally. He again was cordial and acknowledged he'd made an error and had confused Miller with (current Senate candidate) Dan Sullivan. These were intersections of our lives where we had some common ground. Situations where what we saw in each other was positive, despite our strong differences in other areas. And I think these intersections would allow us to converse civilly on issues where our personal values would lead us to conflicting conclusions.
I'd strongly recommend Jonathan Haidt's Ted Talk on the moral mind. It supports my approach here which some of my readers find too sympathetic to the 'bad guys.' It does what is essential to break an impasse - it changes the discussion by focusing on the process rather than the content of the impasse. It asks people to look at their underlying values and to become conscious of their behavior. [I don't see this video in my preview, so if it doesn't work, you can find it (The Moral Roots of Liberals and Conservatives) here.]
Responsibility of Politicians
I would add another aspect to this. I believe that Fred Dyson is certain that he's right. And in the United States, everyone is entitled to his opinion. But once you take the responsibility of political office, you have an obligation to represent fairly the views of as many as possible. (I know that not everyone can be satisfied.) You have a responsibility to listen to others and to seek 'the truth' rather than to simply seek a victory over those who disagree with you.
I believe that Dyson's missing a lot of the picture. Our understanding and practice of sex is very different from what it was when he was young. (And our belief of what it was when he was young is also probably flawed as the citations from digital history above suggest.)
Our differences have, perhaps, more to do with the moral standards Jonathan Haidt says we came pre-programmed with. The challenge is to test our truths, to find common ground with those who give more weight to other moral traits. Rigid, moralistic stances on either side won't lead to good legislation.
Of course, cooperating with 'the other' requires that the other is willing to also cooperate. My take on the Tea Party is that they are certain they are right as reflected in their refusal to compromise. Human history is littered with tragic stories of the suffering caused by those who believed they owned the truth and who had the political or physical power to enforce their truth.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Why Many Of My Videos Won't Work For A While
Viddler, a site similar to Youtube in that you can put videos there and then embed them into your blog post, recently notified me they were shutting down the free accounts. I posted about this once March 2, 2013.
I used YouTube in the beginning, but uploading was very slow and videos had to be very short. So one day I discovered Viddler and found they uploaded faster, they had sharper images, and you could upload longer videos. So I switched over. That was back in August 2007.
In 2010 Viddler sent out emails to members saying they were going to convert to paid accounts only. I told them about my blog, that I was an early adopter, and all the trouble it would cause me to replace all the video on my blog. I suggested they let me continue free as an early adopter. I'd even put up my only ad for them as a sponsor of my blog. They agreed in concept, but it turned out they just backed down on closing down the free accounts. But I got the message. Meanwhile, Google had bought YouTube, and the quality there was much improved. So I started using YouTube as my main server for video on the blog. Once the video is on the server, you can get the embed code and put that in your blog (or on your website) and the video appears.
So about a month ago, I got the new email that they were now closing down the free part of their website. I had 478 videos on Viddler. So I've been busily downloading. I had some problems and the staff were very prompt and helpful. They even offered me a way to batch download the videos, but I couldn't make it work.
In any case, with the exception of about a dozen videos in December 2008 which had some sort of problem they've said they'd try to fix, I think I have everything downloaded. Today was the deadline, but they assured me that they wouldn't shut down my page until I had it all done.
So now I'm uploading videos to YouTube so I can swap out the Viddler hosted videos for Youtube hosted videos. In the near future, the ones that were Viddler will probably stop working. I'm starting to replace the most recent ones - and I really haven't used Viddler that much recently. So I think I might get 2014 and 2013 taken care of before the account closes. Most of those I saved originally to YouTube. It's the older ones that will take a while and may be unviewable until I get them swapped out. If I can do ten a day, I could get them done in a couple of months.
I used YouTube in the beginning, but uploading was very slow and videos had to be very short. So one day I discovered Viddler and found they uploaded faster, they had sharper images, and you could upload longer videos. So I switched over. That was back in August 2007.
In 2010 Viddler sent out emails to members saying they were going to convert to paid accounts only. I told them about my blog, that I was an early adopter, and all the trouble it would cause me to replace all the video on my blog. I suggested they let me continue free as an early adopter. I'd even put up my only ad for them as a sponsor of my blog. They agreed in concept, but it turned out they just backed down on closing down the free accounts. But I got the message. Meanwhile, Google had bought YouTube, and the quality there was much improved. So I started using YouTube as my main server for video on the blog. Once the video is on the server, you can get the embed code and put that in your blog (or on your website) and the video appears.
So about a month ago, I got the new email that they were now closing down the free part of their website. I had 478 videos on Viddler. So I've been busily downloading. I had some problems and the staff were very prompt and helpful. They even offered me a way to batch download the videos, but I couldn't make it work.
In any case, with the exception of about a dozen videos in December 2008 which had some sort of problem they've said they'd try to fix, I think I have everything downloaded. Today was the deadline, but they assured me that they wouldn't shut down my page until I had it all done.
So now I'm uploading videos to YouTube so I can swap out the Viddler hosted videos for Youtube hosted videos. In the near future, the ones that were Viddler will probably stop working. I'm starting to replace the most recent ones - and I really haven't used Viddler that much recently. So I think I might get 2014 and 2013 taken care of before the account closes. Most of those I saved originally to YouTube. It's the older ones that will take a while and may be unviewable until I get them swapped out. If I can do ten a day, I could get them done in a couple of months.
Sunday, March 09, 2014
MENO, ewok, Bisco, and Will - Graffiti Artists At Innovation Lab
I've been posting now and then about graffiti and graffiti artists. The film Exit Through The Gift Shop gave me some sense of graffiti artists and I've paid more attention to what I see on the streets. I get curious about who the people are, why they are using public
spaces to put up their messages.
When I went to the Innovation Lab to meet its director Darla Hane, she told me that graffiti artists were coming. While I was there they began showing up carrying work.
Arielo Taylor (Bisco) and ewok were the first two to bring stuff in - their own and others.
There was some talk about what graffiti actually is. Is it still graffiti if it's done on wood or canvas and hung on a wall instead of spray painted on? What about stencils? Stickers? Tags?
This isn't the first time these artists have had their work displayed indoors like this, but they thought this was probably the biggest collection of graffiti art in Anchorage.
I recognized the name MENO immediately. I'd seen it around town. And there was a MENO piece at an Out North event, and I asked if he were around. But he wasn't.
MENO showed up later at the Innovation Lab.
And he was ok with me taking a picture. He doesn't work on public walls since he was arrested and paid a fine of over five thousand dollars. His signature is very distinct and easy to read.
One of the other artists there was Will. The eye was inked on paper and then Will cut out all the white areas. I've seen very good Chinese paper cut art, but this was something else altogether. [Note, font for "Will's Eyes" from fontmeme.]
Here are some of his works there (in addition to the eye). I immediately assumed the picture in the lower left was a self-portrait and Will confirmed that.
It's clear to me that these guys aren't just guys with spray cans. They have a real sense of art. I'd encourage Anchorage folks to drop by the innovation lab at Loussac - 4th floor where audio/visual used to be - while this stuff is up. And it's for sale.
And try to find Darla and see how you can use or be of use to the lab.
spaces to put up their messages.
When I went to the Innovation Lab to meet its director Darla Hane, she told me that graffiti artists were coming. While I was there they began showing up carrying work.
Arielo Taylor (Bisco) and ewok were the first two to bring stuff in - their own and others.
Arielo (Bisco) Taylor's spider and wolf |
ewok's work |
There was some talk about what graffiti actually is. Is it still graffiti if it's done on wood or canvas and hung on a wall instead of spray painted on? What about stencils? Stickers? Tags?
This isn't the first time these artists have had their work displayed indoors like this, but they thought this was probably the biggest collection of graffiti art in Anchorage.
MENO's work |
I recognized the name MENO immediately. I'd seen it around town. And there was a MENO piece at an Out North event, and I asked if he were around. But he wasn't.
MENO showed up later at the Innovation Lab.
And he was ok with me taking a picture. He doesn't work on public walls since he was arrested and paid a fine of over five thousand dollars. His signature is very distinct and easy to read.
One of the other artists there was Will. The eye was inked on paper and then Will cut out all the white areas. I've seen very good Chinese paper cut art, but this was something else altogether. [Note, font for "Will's Eyes" from fontmeme.]
Here are some of his works there (in addition to the eye). I immediately assumed the picture in the lower left was a self-portrait and Will confirmed that.
It's clear to me that these guys aren't just guys with spray cans. They have a real sense of art. I'd encourage Anchorage folks to drop by the innovation lab at Loussac - 4th floor where audio/visual used to be - while this stuff is up. And it's for sale.
And try to find Darla and see how you can use or be of use to the lab.
Saturday, March 08, 2014
Don't Forget To Turn Your Clock Ahead
Timeanddate writes:
Both pieces have lots of information including pros and cons and research links that say DST is beneficial and harmful to energy use and to health.
As long as we have it (doesn't make too much sense in Alaska), I still propose that in the spring, we jump ahead at 4pm on Friday afternoon instead of on the weekend.
The idea of daylight saving time was first conceived by Benjamin Franklin in 1784 during his stay in Paris. He published an essay titled “An Economical Project for Diminishing the Cost of Light” that proposed to economize the use of candles by rising earlier to make use of the morning sunlight.National Geographic adds:
While serving as U.S. ambassador to France in Paris, Franklin wrote of being awakened at 6 a.m. and realizing, to his surprise, that the sun rose far earlier than he usually did. Imagine the resources that might be saved if he and others rose before noon and burned less midnight oil, Franklin, tongue half in cheek, wrote to a newspaper.
"Franklin seriously realized it would be beneficial to make better use of daylight, but he didn't really know how to implement it," Prerau said. . .
It wasn't until World War I that daylight savings were realized on a grand scale. Germany was the first state to adopt the time changes, to reduce artificial lighting and thereby save coal for the war effort. Friends and foes soon followed suit. In the U.S. a federal law standardized the yearly start and end of daylight saving time in 1918—for the states that chose to observe it.
Both pieces have lots of information including pros and cons and research links that say DST is beneficial and harmful to energy use and to health.
As long as we have it (doesn't make too much sense in Alaska), I still propose that in the spring, we jump ahead at 4pm on Friday afternoon instead of on the weekend.
Friday, March 07, 2014
Maker Space - Fab Labs - Darla Introduces The Innovation Lab At Loussac
I'd heard of Maker Space, but hadn't been to one. The closest, conceptually, I think, was at Off The Chain and Bikerowave, do it yourself bike repair shops with all the tools you need, most of the parts, and someone telling you how to use them. But those are aimed pretty much making an existing technology work.
Maker Space, as I understand it, aims at creating things that don't exist yet. It brings together creative people in a lab space with tools and equipment to make what you can imagine with folks willing to help. Fab labs I'd never heard of, but Darla, on the video, explains they are MIT related.
Darla's an Americorps volunteer in Anchorage for three months so far, whose job it is to create a maker-like-space at Loussac's old audio/visual room on the fourth floor.
Is this a Maker Space? Not exactly. It can't handle some of the tools you'd find in other maker spaces - like blow torches. And it's not a fab lab. So what is the Innovation Lab then?
After talking to Darla, I'd say it's an idea that is evolving and that she wants as many folks as possible to help make this a space that will help connect people and ideas that go beyond the mundane. Given all one can find online, I'd say this space has to take advantage of what you can't do online - have people getting together in person. It's a great space - the old audio visual room of the library. And Darla's got a 3-D printer on order.
In the back, there are different projects like this TEDx sign for the Anchorage TEDx day in the Marston Theater at Loussac on March30. [29 - noon to 7pm] [I didn't notice that the Anchorage TEDx page is for 2013.]
When I was there, some local graffiti artists were bringing in work that will be on display in the lab for the next month or two. I'll do another post on that.
If you have ideas on how to use the lab, give Darla a call. The basic requirement is that what you do is open to the public. And, I assume, priority goes to people promoting the exchange of innovative ideas.
When you're at Loussac, go up to the fourth floor and check out the space. And say hi to whoever is there and talk to them about how they use the space and what they would like it to be.
Think of this as a piece of social community art that we are all going to create.
Maker Space, as I understand it, aims at creating things that don't exist yet. It brings together creative people in a lab space with tools and equipment to make what you can imagine with folks willing to help. Fab labs I'd never heard of, but Darla, on the video, explains they are MIT related.
Darla's an Americorps volunteer in Anchorage for three months so far, whose job it is to create a maker-like-space at Loussac's old audio/visual room on the fourth floor.
Is this a Maker Space? Not exactly. It can't handle some of the tools you'd find in other maker spaces - like blow torches. And it's not a fab lab. So what is the Innovation Lab then?
After talking to Darla, I'd say it's an idea that is evolving and that she wants as many folks as possible to help make this a space that will help connect people and ideas that go beyond the mundane. Given all one can find online, I'd say this space has to take advantage of what you can't do online - have people getting together in person. It's a great space - the old audio visual room of the library. And Darla's got a 3-D printer on order.
In the back, there are different projects like this TEDx sign for the Anchorage TEDx day in the Marston Theater at Loussac on March
When I was there, some local graffiti artists were bringing in work that will be on display in the lab for the next month or two. I'll do another post on that.
If you have ideas on how to use the lab, give Darla a call. The basic requirement is that what you do is open to the public. And, I assume, priority goes to people promoting the exchange of innovative ideas.
When you're at Loussac, go up to the fourth floor and check out the space. And say hi to whoever is there and talk to them about how they use the space and what they would like it to be.
Think of this as a piece of social community art that we are all going to create.
Thursday, March 06, 2014
Exxon-Valdez Almost 25 Years Ago - Plus Some South African Courage
In anticipation of the 25th anniversary (March 24) of the Exxon-Valdez oil spill, retired UAF professor Richard Steiner has a Huffington Post reflection piece Exxon Valdez 25th Anniversary: Lessons Learned, Lessons Lost.
Here are the titles and you can go to the piece to get the details.
Another man who stood up at great personal risk is Horst Gerhard Hermann Kleinschmidt. From South African History Online, here are some excerpts of a life of a man who stood up to unjust power.
Makes me feel like I should get to work.
Here are the titles and you can go to the piece to get the details.
1. Oil spill "cleanup" is a myth:Steiner essentially lost his job for standing up against the oil companies.
2. Oil spills can cause long-term environmental damage:
3. Oil spill restoration is impossible:
4. Officials habitually understate spill risk, size, and impact:
5. Prevention is key:
6. Citizens' oversight is critical:
7. Liability motivates safety:
8. Oil money corrupts democracy:
9. It's time to end our oil addiction:
10. Need for a sustainable society:
Another man who stood up at great personal risk is Horst Gerhard Hermann Kleinschmidt. From South African History Online, here are some excerpts of a life of a man who stood up to unjust power.
Kleinschmidt comes from a family of missionaries, the earliest of whom arrived at the Cape in 1811. In 1814, Missionary Hinrich Schmelen married one of his catechists, a woman of Khoi-khoi origin he met in Pella on the Gariep, later the Orange River. They lived in Komaggas, Northern Cape where one of their three daughters married Missionary Heinrich Kleinschmidt in 1842.Read the whole bio here.
n particular, three events clouded his career prospects: he had organised for a black speaker to address the students on campus – something the authorities disallowed; he wrote articles about black education, had these published in the local student magazine and provided hundreds of extra copies for students at black campuses where publications containing dissent were not allowed. In 1969 he and other leaders led a student march to the infamous John Vorster Square police station where Winnie Mandela and 20 other people were being held without charge or trial. The protest was against detention without charge or trial. For leading the march he and others were arrested, charged and found guilty under the Riotous Assemblies Act (General Laws Amendment Act). The Rector of the Education College warned Kleinschmidt that he had placed his education career in jeopardy.
In 1971, Kleinschmidt was charged under the Suppression of Communism Act for possession of banned (forbidden) literature after a raid on his flat in Cape Town. The raid resulted from the arrest and murder by the police of Ahmed Timol. Timol appeared to have an address list on which Kleinschmidt’s name appeared. Kleinschmidt was acquitted in court with a warning. . .
In 1972, he started work for the South African Christian Institute led by Dominee Beyers Naude, the dissident White Afrikaner leader. Appointed at the same time was Steve Biko, founder of the Black Consciousness movement in South Africa. The two had collaborated since student days. In that year, the authorities permanently withdrew Kleinschmidt’s passport, preventing him from traveling abroad. When Winnie Mandela was imprisoned for six months in 1974, for breaking her banning order, Nelson Mandela (from prison on Robben Island and through his attorney) and Winnie Mandela, appointed Kleinschmidt as the legal guardian of the two Mandela daughters, Zindzi and Zenani. 1974, the all-white Parliament of South Africa appointed a Commission to secretly probe the activities of the Christian Institute and other organisations. Together with the other leadership of the Christian Institute, Kleinschmidt refused to testify unless the proceedings were held in the open. For this they were charged under the Commissions Act. In Kleinschmidt’s case a ‘mistrial’ was recorded due to technical errors committed by the prosecution. His wife at the time, Ilona Aronson was sentenced to six months imprisonment. But when she presented herself at the prison, she found that an anonymous person had paid her fine. It later transpired that a white politician had arranged payment to prevent her from becoming a martyr to the anti-apartheid cause. In 1975, Kleinschmidt was detained under Section 6 of the Terrorism Act that gave the police powers to detain and interrogate persons without charge or a court hearing. He spent 73 days in solitary confinement. The police suspected him of having been recruited by an underground organisation led by the Afrikaans poet, Breyten Breytenbach who was arrested on the grounds of forming an illegal organisation. When no links between the two could be established, Kleinschmidt was released.
Makes me feel like I should get to work.
Wednesday, March 05, 2014
Taking a Break on a Snowy Day
Wet snow. Fog.
Ravens gather in cottonwood.
Short break. Change of scenery.
Russian Jack greenhouse.
Add a little color to gray white day.
Ravens gather in cottonwood.
Short break. Change of scenery.
Russian Jack greenhouse.
Add a little color to gray white day.
Labels:
birds,
cottonwood,
Flowers,
snow,
winter
Tuesday, March 04, 2014
AIFF 2013: Iranian Film Makers Talk about Their Future
Plot 1
She's won a fellowship to leave Iran to study in Berlin. Her fiance is happy for her. She's planning her trip when she's raped. And nothing is the same.
Plot 2
Film makers' movie gets accepted in film festival in Anchorage, Alaska. They travel to the festival and meet a lot of people including a blogger who covers the festival. "Everything is Fine Here" wins honorable mention in the feature category. They meet with blogger after the festival to talk about their film and their future plans.
How often do you get to talk with Iranians? I wanted to know more. I talked with Pourya Azarbayjani and Mona Sartoveh for about 90 minutes partly in English, but also with the help of a local Farsi speaker.
Finally I asked them to just talk on camera, without being interrupted with interpretation. We'd get the interpretation later.
A couple of weeks or so ago, I met with the interpreter and we discussed her interpretation and played around with different words to express what they had said. And we decided not to try to add subtitles to the video, but rather put the English translation below the video in the post.
So, watch the short video and see how much you can pick up from the body language and tone of voice. Then read the translation below.
The translation:
She's won a fellowship to leave Iran to study in Berlin. Her fiance is happy for her. She's planning her trip when she's raped. And nothing is the same.
Plot 2
Film makers' movie gets accepted in film festival in Anchorage, Alaska. They travel to the festival and meet a lot of people including a blogger who covers the festival. "Everything is Fine Here" wins honorable mention in the feature category. They meet with blogger after the festival to talk about their film and their future plans.
How often do you get to talk with Iranians? I wanted to know more. I talked with Pourya Azarbayjani and Mona Sartoveh for about 90 minutes partly in English, but also with the help of a local Farsi speaker.
Finally I asked them to just talk on camera, without being interrupted with interpretation. We'd get the interpretation later.
A couple of weeks or so ago, I met with the interpreter and we discussed her interpretation and played around with different words to express what they had said. And we decided not to try to add subtitles to the video, but rather put the English translation below the video in the post.
So, watch the short video and see how much you can pick up from the body language and tone of voice. Then read the translation below.
The translation:
Steve: Ok, you have come to the US and you plan to stay for the moment, you have a sister in Boston, So what do you expect to do for the next three years?
Pourya: We have decided for now to stay here for a couple of reasons. The first is to learn how to speak English well, because we can reach more people if we can tell our stories in English than we could in Farsi. And it is easier to tell these stories in English because there are so many people here who have come from all around the world. We believe we have come to the right place, because of all the people who have come here with the American dream to build their lives and because they have so many different backgrounds and cultures, there are so many different stories to tell. And I believe that here it’s possible to tell these stories.
We decided in the next three years to make a film, a very good film, Mona and I together. And we’re hoping that first we can raise the money, and second, we can learn how to reach the American audience, and then the rest of the world.
Mona, do you agree?
Mona: I agree with you completely. I hope we’ll succeed. I’m sure we will.
Pourya: The most important thing is this. As two Iranians, we love all the people from around the world from any nation, religion, and race. We believe it’s time that borders and religions should not separate human beings. We, before anything else, are human.
Exxon Valdez Case Study on Environmental Accounting
There are a couple of opportunities at UAA this week to hear Dr. Mark Brown from the University of Florida.
DR. MARK BROWN is a professor of Environmental Engineering Sciences and director of the Center for Environmental Policy at the University of Florida. His research is focused on the interface of humanity and the environment including systems ecology, ecological engineering, ecological economics, and environmental policy. For six years Dr. Brown was a consulting ecologist to The Cousteau Society, working with research teams to develop solutions to a wide array of resource management problems that affect marine resources throughout the world.
TUESDAY, MARCH 4
7 p.m. Rasmuson Hall, Room 101
7 p.m. Rasmuson Hall, Room 101
Energy & the Economy: Reflections on Sustainability
Using systems principles, the economy from a biophysical perspective is a hierarchical interconnected system of resource and monetary flows, driven by available energy and resources. The ability of the environment to support human society is limited, and we need to reconsider the ways we use, measure, and economically value the material resources we consume. We must understand the limits of sustainability as a solution to our energy needs, and develop guidelines for a “prosperous way down”.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5
Noon,
Eugene Short Hall 214
Eugene Short Hall 214
“Emergy” Values of the Marine Ecosystem:
Environmental Accounting for Recovery of Ecosystem Values after Disasters, Using the Exxon Valdez as a Case Study
“Emergy” is an environmental accounting methodology that evaluates goods and services based on the environmental and economic work needed to make them, not human preferences or utility. The Exxon Valdez oil spill will be used to demonstrate this methodology, and assess and discuss the costs of several mitigation strategies to avoid spills in the future.
DR. MARK BROWN is a professor of Environmental Engineering Sciences and director of the Center for Environmental Policy at the University of Florida. His research is focused on the interface of humanity and the environment including systems ecology, ecological engineering, ecological economics, and environmental policy. For six years Dr. Brown was a consulting ecologist to The Cousteau Society, working with research teams to develop solutions to a wide array of resource management problems that affect marine resources throughout the world.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)