And yet, I just can't seem to care
Everything here is hard and bright and violent. Everything I feel, everything I touch, this is hell."
And yet, I just can't seem to care
Everything here is hard and bright and violent. Everything I feel, everything I touch, this is hell."
It wasn't the literacy of folks back then that's the issue, it was their access to information.In the part of my post you omitted, I pointed out that the level of political discourse was substantially higher in the past, which provides an indication that if we ever needed wiser heads to choose our leaders, it may be now rather than in the past.
We can live in the middle of nowhere now and be as connected (immediately) to current events as anyone else. Two hundred or so years ago, that wasn't the case.Why is the immediate access to the day to day or even week to week trivia of the campaign so important to you? Did anything happen in the final few weeks of the last election you participated in to change your mind? If nothing has, and I confess that I've never come to such a late decision, then why is immediacy so important? Even if it is important, why do you think immediacy is of greater import than the ability to have a deeper discussion of issues as we had in the past?
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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Why don't you tell us what you think Left and Right are as I have no idea what you're talking about? From your posts, it's clear that Left is good and Right it evil, but beyond that it's nebulous, especially when you say Leftist dictators don't exist but Rightist ones do. If you're talking about the two major American political parties, why not call them by name? They're both about greed and neither shows much support for the rights delineated in the Constitution.
)
(As long as we ask, "What would Willow and Tara do?")
). As the anti-AIDS poster used to say "Men: Cover Your Meat or Beat It!" Quote:
About seatbelt laws...I really don't see how the government has the right to come into my private property and tell me that I have to wear my seatbelt. They can (and should) tell me I have to obey traffic laws, that I cannot drive while impaired, etc., because those issues affect every driver around me. I have no right to make the road more dangerous for you, if we share the road, but the government should not be telling me I cannot make it more dangerous for myself, if I choose to. I am no threat to you if I'm not buckled in.
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How can you kill people who killed people, to show that killing people is wrong?
I've kissed her best friend. I've reached into her best friend's pocket and fished around for keys. And I gave her best friend my number. I must be doing something totally, totally wrong... - TBSOL by Dreams
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you didn't vote for Perot, to avoid electing Clinton. I didn't vote for Nader, to avoid electing Dubya. We're just alike, right? Wrong
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With rare exceptions, conservative Republicans---like Dubya---are Bad for Willow and Tara
The sky is blue and all the leaves are green. The sun's as warm as a baked potato. I think I know precisely what I mean, When I say it's a Shpadoinkle day.
Edited by: Isychos at: 7/22/03 6:06 pmNow, c'mon you seriously have no idea of what I'm talking about, or are you playing Devil's Advocate?I'm serious. Those words are used so differently by people who identify with each one and even within each group that I never know what people mean by them. Thanks for answering my question. Now another serious question: why do you think the Left is about equality and the Right about inequality? What does equality mean to you anyway?
Driving in the US is a privilage and not a right.Why do you think this? Walking, riding a horse, and other forms of transportation aren't in the constitution either. I see this statement repeated a lot as the reason for laws on driving, but it's an argument which justifies government regulation of essentially all areas of our lives, so I can't agree with it. The 9th and 10th amendments exist for a reason.
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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But typically republicans/conservatives are not usually supportive of gay rights. The more right you go the more hard pressed you'd be to find someone supportive of gay anything.
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Driving in the US is a privilage and not a right.
Why do you think this?
The sky is blue and all the leaves are green. The sun's as warm as a baked potato. I think I know precisely what I mean, When I say it's a Shpadoinkle day.
Edited by: Warduke at: 7/22/03 8:42 pmQuote:
I don't see the issue of a driver being thrown from a vehicle being a threat to her/his fellow drivers as being significant enough to warrant mandating seatbelt use. It doesn't often happen that the body of a driver thrown from a vehicle causes an accident.
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Speaking of which, am I understanding you correctly that you would advocate some kind of legal action against all males whose semen finds its way anywhere except the vagina of a woman who wishes to become pregnant?
). I don't know what I'm advocating, other than a change. Right now, it seems that to say "Yes" to sex w/ a male, carries w/ it an implied consent to insemination (broadly understood, inc. oral and anal). I'm just not sure why this is the case. I'd like the default to be the other way---that a male has no right to inseminate, w/o express permission (something more than "No, Baby, you don't have to wear that." Barebacking is becoming a serious problem in the resurgent spread of HIV among young American gay men). Who Owns What?
That's the fundamental question, and it's going to get more fundamental as we roll toward the next presidential election here in the US. Much is at stake, including Linux and its natural habitat: the Net. Both have been extraordinarily good for business. Its perceived "threat" to Microsoft and the dot-com crash are both red herrings. Take away Linux and the Net, and both technology and the economy would be a whole lot worse.
Both the Net and Linux were created, grew and flourished almost entirely outside the regulatory sphere. They are, in a literal sense, what free markets have done with their freedoms.
Yet, there are some who do not care. Unfortunately, they're driving the conversation right now. Hollywood has lawmakers and news organizations convinced that file sharing is "piracy" and "theft". Apple, Intel and Microsoft are quietly doing their deals with the Hollywood devil, crippling (or contemplating the crippling of) PC functionalities, to protect the intellectual property of "content producers".
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Two oddly allied mentalities provide intellectual air cover for these threats to the marketplace. One is the extreme comfort certain industries feel inside their regulatory environments. The other is the high regard political conservatives hold for successful enterprises. Combine the two, and you get conservatives eagerly rewarding companies whose primary achievements consist of successful long-term adaptation to highly regulated environments.
That's what's happened with broadcasting and telecom.
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There's also a problem with conceiving broadcast service--especially the commercial variety--as a "marketplace." Its customers and consumers are different populations. The customers of commercial broadcasting are advertisers, not viewers and listeners. In fact, commercial broadcasting mostly is an advertising business. The "content" it distributes is merely bait; the goods sold are the ears and eyeballs of "consumers". That means commercial broadcasting's real marketplace is Madison Avenue, not radio and TV dials. As a consumer of commercial broadcast programming, your direct influence is zero because that's exactly what you pay. (Paying for cable or satellite service doesn't count, because that payment is for access, not for the content itself.)
The notable exceptions are "premium" channels like HBO and public broadcasting. The reason why programming on both is relatively higher in quality is a simple one: there's little or no split in their markets between customers and consumers. As a viewer or listener, you get what you pay for.
All of which is why this talk about the "media marketplace" is highly screwed up. Relaxing broadcast property ownership rules, in the absence of making larger chunks of available spectrum for everybody, is hardly deregulation. It is a highly selective change in existing regulation that opens opportunities only to the most successful players in a completely closed marketplace.
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The Net's problem, from telco and cable industries' perspective, is it was born without a business model. Its standards and protocols imagine no coercive regime to require payment--no metering, no service levels, no charges for levels of bandwidth. Worse, it was designed as an end-to-end system, where all the power to create, distribute and consume are located at the ends of the system and not in the middle. In the words of David Eisenberg the Internet's innards purposefully were kept "stupid". All the intelligence properly belonged at the ends. As a pure end-to-end system, the Net also was made to be symmetrical. It wasn't supposed to be like TV, with fat content flowing in only one direction.
The Net's end-to-end nature is so severely anathema to cable and telco companies that they have done everything they can to make the Net as controlled and asymmetrical as possible. They want the Net to be more like television, and to a significant degree, they've succeeded. Most DSL and cable broadband customers take it for granted that downstream speeds are faster than upstream speeds, that they can't operate servers out of their houses and that the only e-mail addresses they can use are ones that end with the name of their telephone or cable company.
And why not? These companies "own" the Net, don't they? Well, no, they don't. They only "provide" it--critical difference.
The gradual destruction of the Net is getting political protection by two strong conservative value systems. One values success, and the other values property. Let's look at success first.
Liberals often are flummoxed by the way conservatives seem to love big business (including, of course, big media). Yet the reason is simple: they love winners, literally. They like to reward strength and achievement. They hate rewarding weakness for the same reason a parent hates rewarding kids' poor grades. This, more than anything else, is what makes conservatives so radically different from liberals. It's why favorite liberal buzzwords like "fairness" and "opportunity" are fingernails on the chalkboards of conservative minds. To conservatives, those words are code-talk for punishing the strong and rewarding the weak.
As George Lakoff explained in Moral Politics: What Conservatives Know that Liberals Don't (University of Chicago, 1995), conservatives consider strength a "moral value". Strong is good. Weak is bad.
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Now, to the elections. Look at the two big political parties; both have existed largely as funding mechanisms. For proof, ask yourself, "When was the last time I went to a party meeting?" Whatever other functions they serve, the parties are fundamentally about The Money.
At least until the Net came along.
As I write this, Democratic candidate Howard Dean just gathered his party's largest campaign fund for the most recent quarter. The mainstream press has acknowledged that most of this money came from fund-raising on the Internet. But they avoid visiting a fact that should be deeply troubling to every candidate running (and then governing) for money rather than for voters: Dean's lead is owed to a huge number of small donations, not to a small number of large special interests. If he's being bought, it's by his voters. This is a New Thing. It's also been made possible by the Net.
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
I understand, you should be with the person you l-love
I am
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This, more than anything else, is what makes conservatives so radically different from liberals. It's why favorite liberal buzzwords like "fairness" and "opportunity" are fingernails on the chalkboards of conservative minds. To conservatives, those words are code-talk for punishing the strong and rewarding the weak.
As George Lakoff explained in Moral Politics: What Conservatives Know that Liberals Don't (University of Chicago, 1995), conservatives consider strength a "moral value". Strong is good. Weak is bad.
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4WiccanLuv, I'd like to understand you. Really I would. Maybe I could begin to, if you could explain your (Kitten) name to me? Because when I think of "WiccanLuv," and Willow-n-Tara, and Goodness . . . I think Left. I think of the political Left---that's what those things mean to me.
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"Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, to assure the survival and success of liberty." - John F. JFK
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The democratic legislature is looking into a way that Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante will fill in. Don't know if they can do this.
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1) that the crapful state of California's (and the rest of the U.S.!) economy has far more to do w/ Republican greed and mismanagement (inside California and "trickling down" from the Dubya Cesspool) than anything Davis has or hasn't done . .
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"Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, to assure the survival and success of liberty." - John F. JFK
: yeah, that's true of my state, too, and how many others?Quote:
They've already shut down hundreds of childcare centers, terminated thousands of state workers, college tuition fees have shot through the roof, they’re thinking of raising the state tax yet again
We're not all running to recall our governors, though.
Out
Exsqueeze me? Clinton left the U.S. w/ a surplus---Dubya's giving us the biggest deficits in U.S. history! I'm not saying Bush is entirely responsible for the worst recession in a generation (the Dot.Com Bust was clearly already coming before the 2000 election), but it's clear that his back-loaded tax cuts, favoring the wealthiest, while driving up the national debt, have made the recession significantly worse.While Bush may have the worst economic policy since FDR, I'm not sure that his policies have had time to percolate through the economy for us to feel them yet. It'll be a lot worse when the time comes to pay off those bills for military spending and tax cuts.
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
(Besides, didn't he have the Supreme Court, Republicans and Dixiecrats thwarting him at most every turn?)Quote:
FDR cleverly involved the US into a war
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Exsqueeze me? Clinton left the U.S. w/ a surplus---Dubya's giving us the biggest deficits in U.S. history!
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yeah, that's true of my state, too, and how many others? We're not all running to recall our governors, though.
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And you say things are tough for the poor employers and business owners, vs. those naughty workers
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I don't see how you can justify the extraordinary disruption, to say nothing of the cost, of a recall.*
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"Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, to assure the survival and success of liberty." - John F. JFK
I understand, you should be with the person you l-love
I am
OK, dmw, article-of-faith time: FDR was one of the greatest leaders in American history (far and away my favorite President of that tortured century).He was certainly charismatic and even courageous, but he was displayed little intelligence or focus in either his personal or political life. While the WPA was a good idea and he did experience opposition to his policies, he had and successfully executed just as many bad policies, his economic bumbling overall worsening the Great Depression until he discovered WWII as a way out. It was people like Eisenhower, Hull, and Stimson who are responsible for many of the American political successes of WWII, often having to push Roosevelt to renege on whatever foolishness he had just agreed to.
Now dmw, be fair: I'm a *pacifist*, but even I'm not going to call the U.S. role in smashing Fascism (those most unpleasant Nazi death camps---hello?), as merely a war the U.S. was "involved into."Stopping the Holocaust wasn't even on the board as one the US's war aims during WWII. After all, the US continued to deny Jews fleeing it entry into the US due to its immigration quota system after the US knew about the camps. The War Refugee Board wasn't established until 1944.
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
).
I'm going to focus on them for awhile (in-between job-applying, of course), and less on the day-to-day of Dubya's latest outrage, or Gray Davis/FDR's supposed sins. I suspect, by avoiding this thread, I'll feel better---maybe the rest of you who remain will, too.
Out I take to shade and I play in the shadows
I watch my back and I play it cool
"Blue Pariah" by BRJ
The premise of all this ballyhoo is that the industry (and its artists) are being harmed by free downloading.
Nonsense. Let's take it from my personal experience. My site (http://www.janisian.com ) gets an average of 75,000 hits a year. Not bad for someone whose last hit record was in 1975. When Napster was running full-tilt, we received about 100 hits a month from people who'd downloaded Society's Child or At Seventeen for free, then decided they wanted more information. Of those 100 people (and these are only the ones who let us know how they'd found the site), 15 bought CDs. Not huge sales, right? No record company is interested in 180 extra sales a year. But… that translates into $2700, which is a lot of money in my book. And that doesn't include the ones who bought the CDs in stores, or who came to my shows.
Or take author Mercedes Lackey, who occupies entire shelves in stores and libraries. As she said herself: "For the past ten years, my three "Arrows" books, which were published by DAW about 15 years ago, have been generating a nice, steady royalty check per pay-period each. A reasonable amount, for fifteen-year-old books. However... I just got the first half of my DAW royalties...And suddenly, out of nowhere, each Arrows book has paid me three times the normal amount!...And because those books have never been out of print, and have always been promoted along with the rest of the backlist, the only significant change during that pay-period was something that happened over at Baen, one of my other publishers. That was when I had my co-author Eric Flint put the first of my Baen books on the Baen Free Library site. Because I have significantly more books with DAW than with Baen, the increases showed up at DAW first. There's an increase in all of the books on that statement, actually, and what it looks like is what I'd expect to happen if a steady line of people who'd never read my stuff encountered it on the Free Library - a certain percentage of them liked it, and started to work through my backlist, beginning with the earliest books published. The really interesting thing is, of course, that these aren't Baen books, they're DAW---another publisher---so it's 'name loyalty' rather than 'brand loyalty.' I'll tell you what, I'm sold. Free works."
I've found that to be true myself; every time we make a few songs available on my website, sales of all the CDs go up. A lot.
And I don't know about you, but as an artist with an in-print record catalogue that dates back to 1965, I'd be thrilled to see sales on my old catalogue rise.
Now, RIAA and NARAS, as well as most of the entrenched music industry, are arguing that free downloads hurt sales. (More than hurt - they're saying it's destroying the industry.)
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the music industry had exactly the same response to the advent of reel-to-reel home tape recorders, cassettes, DATs, minidiscs, VHS, BETA, music videos
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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