Tuesday, November 23, 2004

43 things

This is cool, and interesting, and intriguing: 43 things. It's a snowballing list, a huge jumble sale of ideas and dreams and funny phrases.

What it is is a web page that asks you "What do you want to do with your life?" and you type in a box, or you can select from the ever changing list below the question - that is, you can pick something that someone else wants to do with their life. And you get more than one thing - you get 43 things, at least I presume you only get 43.

Here's my list - I'm number 23448.

Friday, November 19, 2004

sketchcrawl

Last night I came across this - sketchcrawl - it's a site put together by Enrico Casarosa. His idea is this, take a day and sketch, travel around and just keep drawing. He did it back in August, and now he's encouraging people all over the world to do it. It's so cool people having these ideas and just putting them out there.

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Today I've got to get this blessed essay done. Today is the day, in fact this morning is the morning. The essay must go out!

I will report back once its done.

Thursday, November 11, 2004

cutting some slack

I've been a slack blogger of late. I've been posting things to my del.icio.us list instead of writing about them. It's easier. Way easier, I don't have to think about why I find the site interesting, I don't have to enunciate anything, all I've got to do is choose some tags.

So to reverse the trend I've just posted this Tell Me Your War Stories to del.icio.us and I'm writing about it here as well. The blogger found me via my profile where I list Joan Didion as a favourite author. The blogger is a graduate student and English professor doing a project around war rhetoric, and the way that soldiers refer to combat - very interesting.

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

waiting for results

I'm sitting here, playing with my various blogs, thinking about the presentation I've got to give tomorrow - 5 minutes on "About Freedom: Words for Movement", thinking that I should be looking stuff up and printing it out to make overheads etc etc, sitting here with the The New York Times open, watching the US election results roll in.

It's always tedious waiting for results, nerve racking even, imagining the best and the worst. Imagining.

Robert Manne wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald about what our response can be to the 2004 Australian election result. He asserts, and I agree with him, that we can do stuff, we do not have to sit around waiting for the party, or anybody else to do it for us. He writes:
". . . members of the left-liberal intelligentsia have essentially three political options from which to choose. The first is a movement to the Greens. The second is to remain inside Labor, under the discipline of a self-denying ordinance, while waiting for the arrival of more hopeful times. The third option is for the left to conduct the struggles for the causes in which it believes outside the framework of party politics, temporarily at least.

We are fortunate to live in a free society. There is no reason why those who still care about Aboriginal reconciliation, for example, should not devote themselves to work at the grassroots. There is no reason why those who believe in multiculturalism, and who are concerned about the growing anti-Muslim mood, should not involve themselves actively in inter-communal dialogue.

There is no reason why those who believe in justice for refugees should not help those living in the purgatory of temporary visas to try to get on as well as possible with their lives. There is no reason why those who opposed the invasion of Iraq should not work prodigiously against the propaganda of the Government and the bias of the Murdoch press to create a public awareness of the frightening deterioration of conditions of life in contemporary Iraq.

During the days of Bob Hawke and Keating the left-liberal intelligentsia became too reliant on government support. What we ought to have learned since the election of Howard is that what governments can give so can they take away.

Just as the scope for action has narrowed in recent years, so has the need for action, independent of government and outside the framework of party politics, become even more vital in these unpropitious times."


Yes, "the need for action, independent of government and outside the framework of party politics" is vital.

tags: politics, change