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People of the WordHow big is "now"?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on September 9, 2006 - 4:56pm.
on People of the Word | Politics That may seem like a weird question, but it's an important one. How LONG is "now"...does that make it clearer? Didn't think so. Technically there's no such thing as now. It's like the point at which possibility (which doesn't exist yet) collapses into events and pass away. Future and past don't exist, now is too transitory to identify. So we work in a window of time: intelligence grasping possibilities, perception passing the moment into memory; functionally, 'now' is this joining of intelligence, perception and memory and the size of your 'now' is determined by how much intelligence and memory you invoke. The Möbius pointSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 8, 2006 - 9:02am.
on For the Democrats | People of the Word | Random rant Man, there's a lotta-lotta stuff I want to get to today and I don't know how much I'll get to. I got income inequality stuff, education stuff, Disney propaganda stuff, race and politics stuff... Not one bit of it has any 9/11 rememberances. The funniest is that Republicans have taken their "Party of Lincoln" bullshit to its (il)logical extreme: Bush AS Lincoln. Which makes the Party of Lincoln the Party of Bush. Think about that for a minute. The meme was officially launched yesterday on the Huffington Post and OpinionJournal/WSJ Op-Ed pages. Steve Gilliard ran across Lincoln Lied and Thousands Died on the Huffington Post and asked the musical question
I saw ol' Newt Gingrich's Bush and Lincoln piece in OpinionJournal. Deep, deep, deep, deep, DEEP into "People of the Word" spaceSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on September 4, 2006 - 1:36pm.
on People of the Word
I hate doing thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 27, 2006 - 7:54pm.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity McWhorter got off some truths today while keeping the political noise down to an acceptable level.
More lessons in effective rhetoricSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 24, 2006 - 8:52am.
on People of the Word
Well, I COULD have told you soSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 23, 2006 - 9:35am.
on People of the Word | War This is the sort of thing that scares the hell out of Thomas Sowell. It's the problem we are least prepared to handle.
Mark this day wellSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 22, 2006 - 7:59pm.
on Culture wars | People of the Word I am going to agree with Mr. Sowell; but only to the degree that I quote him.
I am done quoting him. I disagree entirely on the nature of the threat. Hey, nobody's perfectSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 22, 2006 - 9:52am.
on Culture wars | People of the Word | Politics E.J. Dionne is just stooopit today.
When I find myself in a situation in which your personal choice of label matters, I call myself a progressive. This is because some pinhead will jump up and say, "Why don't you call yourself a librul? Progressives is what libruls call theyself when they don't want to call theyself a librul!" They use the exclamation point, too. I then say, "fine, I'm a librul," and my argument is unaffected. It's a teaching moment. But I have no idea why Mr. Dionne thought anything good could come of this. Fitting the facts into the officially sanctioned languageSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 18, 2006 - 12:43pm.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity The reaction to Mr. Jackson's particular phrasing of a particular state of affairs reminded me of a couple other presentations at the Conference of the Humanities Institute and the Human Rights Institute of the University of Connecticut that caught my eye. They are on the way the experiences of oppressed people are translated for consumption by the wealthier world. On the Rectification of NamesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2006 - 1:30pm.
on People of the Word Confucius’ Rectification of Names is one of those concepts that just struck me as correct immediately upon hearing it. Tsze-lu asked, "What?" Tsze-lu replied. "That's your first priority? The right words?" More fan mailSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 15, 2006 - 6:23am.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity | Seen online So it's not mail. The guy on YouTube don't know me very well. In his defense of George Will's naked race card invocation this weekend, he wrote:
Prometheus6 (there's a 500 word per comment limit...) Lieberman for President - Nader for VeepSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 10, 2006 - 10:22am.
on People of the Word Who's polarizing now?
John HenryismSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on August 8, 2006 - 7:58pm.
on Health | People of the Word | Race and Identity ptcruiser sent me a couple of links I sat on for a while. It looked familiar.
A little self-knowledge via knowledge of othersSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 24, 2006 - 8:18pm.
on People of the Word He Who Cast the First Stone Probably Didn’t Lesson 1:
As close to a vote of no confidence as we get in this countrySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 23, 2006 - 6:22am.
on Impeachable offenses | People of the Word Bar association task force urges Congress to push for judicial review of Bush signing statements
From a fanSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 19, 2006 - 11:17am.
on Media | People of the Word | Politics | Race and Identity Nubian at blac(k)ademic is frustrated. To Nubian (because I am a fan): Be clear your purpose diverges from theirs as soon as you mention race. Freedom from racism means different things to white and Black folks. And be clear on the real effect the swarm of gnats have on you. If they can actually impact your physical condition, that's one thing. If not, their complaints are powerless expressions of their preference to just turn away. Meanwhile, your writing has had a positive effect on your readers. Right now you're going through a firestorm. Mine wasn't as bad as yours, partly because my initial focus was on giving a Black guy's views on mainstream issues and partly because I've long worked on framing my issues in the currert debating terms. But when they can't move you, they give up. You have to express your passion with a certain detachment, is all. Meanwhile, I'll keep checking for your now-weekly posts. American Intrapolitics: Personal or collective action?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 17, 2006 - 5:12pm.
on Culture wars | People of the Word
In the sixties, Black folks felt the way ahead to get as much of America as we could, to show we were the same as everyone else. Great numbers of folks felt by pursuing their own best interests they were automatically advancing the race. The result of that, though, was the fragmentation of the community.
Those Black folks that did well in those circumstances are now saying we should unite in pursuit of economic rights. Economic are the new civil rights and though I recognize the importance of understanding economics, I must note two things.
In fact, one of the immediate criticisms of Tavis Smiley's Covenant thing was that it represented no real change. Opinions?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on July 6, 2006 - 10:06pm.
on People of the Word | Politics from We need leaders, not managers For the record, I agree with the title for the most part. The idea that there are a limited number of plot lines in politics rings true, though this is the first time I'm considering it. Digby goes on about it for a bit.
The leadership story today What's the story that the new leaders will need to communicate? In broad outline, we know what it will be, both for Democrats and Republicans, since as Robert Reich has explained, there are only four stories in American politics: So I'm quoting George Lakoff...sue meSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 5, 2006 - 11:12am.
on People of the Word | Politics All this framing crap is typical People of the Word stuff. But since that's how folks operate, here ya go.
Stolen from Glen GreenwaldSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on July 4, 2006 - 7:52am.
on People of the Word | Politics Since I linked the original post in the past, I'll just lift this UPDATE II: Greg Sargent of The American Prospect puts the final nail in what ought to be the coffin of whatever vestiges of credibility were left for Malkin, Horowitz, Red State, et al. He confirmed with the Secret Service what I reported earlier (that the NYT photographer had Rumsfeld's permission to take those photographs) and what was obvious all along (that the article did not pose any remote threat as Cheney and Rumsfeld's own spokespeople acknowledge):
The Bell Curve StrategySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on June 21, 2006 - 5:53am.
on Culture wars | People of the Word The thing that most of the peons that based their rhetoric on The Bell Curve found most convincing was the sheer size of the book. One of the favorite supporting statements (I almost dignified them by calling them 'arguments') from S.C.A.A. days was "If even half the material is true..." The Bell Curve is as much talisman as book. And now that Conservatism is reaching its logical extreme, it too needs a talisman. An A-to-Z Book of Conservatism Now Weighs In WASHINGTON, June 20 — It has red states and blond pundits; home schoolers and The Human Life Review; originalists, monetarists, federalists and evangelists; and no shortage of people named Kristol. Bear with me, there's a reason for all this libertarianism todaySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on June 17, 2006 - 9:24am.
on People of the Word | Seen online
I should warn you Zenpundit is not the blog you might expect from the name and the quote. At the same time, the quote is not quite atypical. You should follow that Metacognitive regulation link. I actually eliminated all the other links in the paragraph to make sure you noticed it. Among the things I want to explain but don't have the time toSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on June 13, 2006 - 7:03pm.
on People of the Word | Rhetoric First:
Next, Thirty-eight dishonest tricks which are commonly used in argument, with the methods of overcoming them so you know when you're getting played. This crap happens in newspapers and such, not just in blog comments. Emphasis added to my personal favorites. Not like you have to memorize stuff... Do I have this right?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on June 8, 2006 - 8:00am.
on People of the Word 'Support" is one of those words I've had to see as an undefined term...a word whose meaning is entirely determined by the circumstances in which it is used. I think I have a working definition now. I think it means "act to increase the supported entity's self esteem." Okay. The next word to work out is "leadership." I thought I had that one down until I started watching Congress live on C-Span. Global warming and identity theftSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on June 2, 2006 - 11:25am.
on People of the Word "Global warming" has turned out to be an unfortunate term. It made people expect a simple increase in temperature across the board rather than a complex cascade of events. "Catastrophic climate change" is more accurate. "Identity theft" may turn out to be equally unfortunate.
"Identity theft" isn't about copping your name or style or personality. It's about getting access to your assets. The account number is enough; more than enough when there's no personal information one can use to verify you're the person that owns the account. What's the difference between investing and betting?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on May 30, 2006 - 6:07am.
on Economics | People of the Word Hey, good question, P6!
One would hope so. What's in the Name? Researchers Suggest It's Money A stock ticker symbol or company name that is easy to pronounce may be a significant factor in short-term increases in stock price, according to a report published online yesterday in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. I should probably not write thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 18, 2006 - 11:05am.
on People of the Word | Religion
This is deep because names are free and speak to a parent's aspirations for what a child will become. Yet if you believe in words that deeply isn't the reversal of the spelling of serious symbolic significance? And if It's a Boy, Will It Be Lleh? Minor head explosionsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 16, 2006 - 7:33am.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity There's always been a major contingent of right wing and Conservative commentators that I found too absurd to read...since I found World Net Daily it has been right up there at the top of the list. Yesterday I got a heads-up about a post over there by this guy.
I think I'll set up a Google watchlist for this. I'd like to see the right-wing reaction to this...I suspect it will be slight. Mr. Day has written one of those articles...one that can only have the intent outwardly claimed if you abandon all human context. On his personal blog, in a discussion of the minor shitstorm the gentleman is trying to create, a commenter wrote Progress as a term of artSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 12, 2006 - 6:40am.
on People of the Word I thought you'd like to know how the Bush regime can keep talking about the progress in Iraq with a straight face. Have you ever run a mid-sized to major corporate project, or participated in scheduling one? You'll have these gantt charts running your damn life for a while. You'll have these progress meetings where you talk about which tasks are on schedule, which are falling behind, which are on hold untill two parallel tasks are completed. And every bullet point you hit is progress. And when you have to revert a step because some other process won't be ready, bringing that reverted step back to its earlier condition is also progress. It's not progress when the copying machines you need to distribute the plans break down (yes, success depends on copying machines too). That's not a problem with the plan, though. It's like they used the Cliff Notes for their bullet pointsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on May 2, 2006 - 7:13am.
on Culture wars | People of the Word Turn the pages to 1984 IT IS becoming increasingly depressing to reread ''1984," George Orwell's prophetic, mid-20th-century novel about what life might be like in a future where the state listens in on every conversation, in a world where prisoners had ''simply disappeared," and in which Britain and the Americas are in a state of perpetual warfare with either ''Eastasia" or ''Eurasia." Orwell didn't think of calling it ''the long war," as the Pentagon now likes to call the ''war against terror," which by definition is a war that can never end. |
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