From Secession.net:
At least 5,000 racial, ethnic, linguistic and cultural groups are lumped together into only 189 nation states. Most of the world's violent conflicts are related to struggles for dominance within or independence from some large, multi-national nation state. A large percentage of the world’s people (especially in populous India, China, Indonesia and Africa) would choose to secede from their respective nation states if given the opportunity.
Not to mention states and provinces themselves splitting up. This is how West Virginia, for instance, formed.
Monday, August 31, 2009
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Accents
I just recently returned to the library a good book on accents by Robert Blumenfeld, titled Accents: A Manual for Actors.
What I found interesting was that accents change over time, and the late-nineteenth-century/early twentieth-century accents used by the American and British upper classes are all but extinct. Two CDs accompanied the book, and there was a sample of such an American accent, in which the speaker pronounced Philippines as Philippins, and abdomen as abDOmen.
I plan to post more later.
http://linguistlist.org/ask-ling/accent.html
One post here mentions the accents of George Plimpton and William F. Buckley.
What I found interesting was that accents change over time, and the late-nineteenth-century/early twentieth-century accents used by the American and British upper classes are all but extinct. Two CDs accompanied the book, and there was a sample of such an American accent, in which the speaker pronounced Philippines as Philippins, and abdomen as abDOmen.
I plan to post more later.
http://linguistlist.org/ask-ling/accent.html
One post here mentions the accents of George Plimpton and William F. Buckley.
Monday, August 10, 2009
Thursday, August 06, 2009
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Monday, August 03, 2009
http://kunstler.com/blog/2009/08/hunky-dory.html
An excerpt:
Too many disastrous things are lined up in the months ahead to insure that we're entering a new phase of history: The Long Emergency.
Government at every level is worse than broke.
Our currency, the US dollar, is hemmorrhaging legitimacy.
Inability to service old debt at all levels or incur new debt.
Bad (toxic) debt lurking off balance sheets everywhere.
The housing bubble fiasco is far from over.
Unemployment rising implaccably.
So-called "consumers" unable to consume consumables.
Crucial energy import supply lines fragile.
Food supply subject to energy problems and climate abnormalities.
A world full of other societies who would enjoy watching us fail and suffer.
When The Long Emergency was published in 2005, I said then that the greatest danger this society faced would be its inclination to gear up a campaign to sustain the unsustainable at all costs -- rather than face the need to make new arrangements for daily life. That appears to be exactly what has happened, and it didn't happen under the rule of some backward-facing, right-wing, Jesus-haunted crypto-fascist, but rather a "progressive" party led by a dynamically affable young man unburdened by deep cultural allegiance to Wall Street. Barack Obama has been sucked in and suckered. "Change you can believe in" has morphed into "a status quo you will bend heaven and earth to hold onto."
Whatever else you might think or feel about Mr. Obama's performance so far, this strategy on the broader question of where we go as a nation pulses with tragedy. What's remarkable to me, to go a step further, is the absence of comprehensive vision -- not just in the president, but in all the supposedly able and intelligent people around him, and even those leaders not in government but in business and education and science and the professions.
History is clearly presenting us with a new set of mandates: get local, get finer, downscale, and get going on it right away. Prepare for it now or nature will whack you upside the head with it not too long from now. Attempting to maintain anything on the gigantic scale will turn out to be a losing proposition, whether it is military control of people in Central Asia, or colossal bureaucracies run in the USA, or huge factory farms, or national chain store retail, or hypertrophied state universities, or global energy supply networks.
And Kunstler acknowledges Kauai blogger Juan Wilson for his post about R. Crumb.
http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2009/08/kunstler-digs-crumb.html
An excerpt:
Too many disastrous things are lined up in the months ahead to insure that we're entering a new phase of history: The Long Emergency.
Government at every level is worse than broke.
Our currency, the US dollar, is hemmorrhaging legitimacy.
Inability to service old debt at all levels or incur new debt.
Bad (toxic) debt lurking off balance sheets everywhere.
The housing bubble fiasco is far from over.
Unemployment rising implaccably.
So-called "consumers" unable to consume consumables.
Crucial energy import supply lines fragile.
Food supply subject to energy problems and climate abnormalities.
A world full of other societies who would enjoy watching us fail and suffer.
When The Long Emergency was published in 2005, I said then that the greatest danger this society faced would be its inclination to gear up a campaign to sustain the unsustainable at all costs -- rather than face the need to make new arrangements for daily life. That appears to be exactly what has happened, and it didn't happen under the rule of some backward-facing, right-wing, Jesus-haunted crypto-fascist, but rather a "progressive" party led by a dynamically affable young man unburdened by deep cultural allegiance to Wall Street. Barack Obama has been sucked in and suckered. "Change you can believe in" has morphed into "a status quo you will bend heaven and earth to hold onto."
Whatever else you might think or feel about Mr. Obama's performance so far, this strategy on the broader question of where we go as a nation pulses with tragedy. What's remarkable to me, to go a step further, is the absence of comprehensive vision -- not just in the president, but in all the supposedly able and intelligent people around him, and even those leaders not in government but in business and education and science and the professions.
History is clearly presenting us with a new set of mandates: get local, get finer, downscale, and get going on it right away. Prepare for it now or nature will whack you upside the head with it not too long from now. Attempting to maintain anything on the gigantic scale will turn out to be a losing proposition, whether it is military control of people in Central Asia, or colossal bureaucracies run in the USA, or huge factory farms, or national chain store retail, or hypertrophied state universities, or global energy supply networks.
And Kunstler acknowledges Kauai blogger Juan Wilson for his post about R. Crumb.
http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2009/08/kunstler-digs-crumb.html
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Monday, July 27, 2009
A Sequel to World Made by Hand
Kunstler says he's working on the sequel to his post-oil novel World Made by Hand.
Labels:
Kunstler,
Long Emergency,
novels,
peak oil,
World Made by Hand
Friday, July 24, 2009
Cold, etc.
I'm battling a cold, hence the lack of regular postings. The Hilo weather has often been overcast this summer (consistently clear, sunny days are a hallmark of winters here, especially December through February). People have to get serious yet maintain a sense of joy and lightness.
LewRockwell.com reprints an Iranian interview with Kirkpatrick Sale on secession.
And I'll see what ABC's take is on America's addiction to oil.
LewRockwell.com reprints an Iranian interview with Kirkpatrick Sale on secession.
And I'll see what ABC's take is on America's addiction to oil.
Labels:
Hilo,
Lew Rockwell,
peak oil,
television,
weather
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Empty Boxes
Via Kunstler, who says, "It was obvious years ago that the grotesque spewage of Big Box stores across the landscape would come to this.": "Big Box Closures Leave Big Blight Across U.S."
Cf. DeadMalls.com
Curiously, many of these businesses' websites live on long after their namesake companies go defunct.
11 July update: "This is what a dying mall looks like."
Cf. DeadMalls.com
Curiously, many of these businesses' websites live on long after their namesake companies go defunct.
11 July update: "This is what a dying mall looks like."
Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Sunday, July 05, 2009
Man in the Mirror
Michael Jackson, performing "Man in the Mirror" at the thirtieth annual Grammy Awards ceremony, held on 2 March 1988 at Radio City Music Hall.
Magnificent.
Magnificent.
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Vibe Ends Publication
But Quincy Jones plans to buy it back. Below: The cover of the first Vibe I bought. I believe at the 7-Eleven on Kilauea Avenue.

Thursday, June 25, 2009
Le Roi est mort, vive le Roi!
See MichaelJackson.com
and innumerable sites across the Internet.
30 June update: Ishmael Reed jousts with the media bullies who speak ill of a dead man.
Armond White on Michael Jackson's legacy here.
And here (Part 1). (Part 2).
and innumerable sites across the Internet.
30 June update: Ishmael Reed jousts with the media bullies who speak ill of a dead man.
Armond White on Michael Jackson's legacy here.
And here (Part 1). (Part 2).
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Link Updates
I've just found (via ilind.net) and added Honolulu Agonizer (under Local and Hawaiian Culture) and Beard Revue (under Fashion and Appearances). Go to All Links in the sidebar.
24 June update: Paleo-Future ("a look into the future that never was") joins the other links in the Uncategorized section. The future is never quite as we predict it.
24 June update: Paleo-Future ("a look into the future that never was") joins the other links in the Uncategorized section. The future is never quite as we predict it.
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Bret Easton Ellis's Tweets
Oh my.
I've been unconvinced either to join or to follow Twitter, but for him I'll make an exception. Not to say I'll join or become a Twitter follower, but I'll tune in regularly.
I've been unconvinced either to join or to follow Twitter, but for him I'll make an exception. Not to say I'll join or become a Twitter follower, but I'll tune in regularly.
Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Brace Yourselves
says this.
However:
However:
While much of the world will be roasting (he prefers the term "global heating"), there will be a few oases to weather out the storm, he says. Island nations, such as his own Britain as well as New Zealand, Ireland and Hawaii, will do fine thanks to the moderating effects of oceans and their rainstorms. Ditto for currently cold northern areas, including parts of Canada and Siberia, which will gain a more hospitable climate.
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