Saturday, April 28, 2012

Big Money, Big Media, Big Trouble


Wittgenstein -La aventura del pensamiento

Ludwig Wittgenstein, filósofo y lingüista austriaco-británico (1889 - 1951)

European, US Austerity Drive is Suicidal: Nobel Economist Stiglitz


Isabel Allende

Island beneath the sea


La Isla Bajo el Mar.jpg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jg9vASAg6-A

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Instantes / Instants


             If I were able to live my life again,
             next time I would try to make more mistakes.
I would not try to be so perfect.  I would be more relaxed.
I would be much more foolish than I have been.  In fact,
I would take very few things seriously.
I would be much less sanitary.


Instantes (Instants)




If I were able to live my life anew,
In the next I would try to commit more errors.
I would not try to be so perfect, I would relax more.
I would be more foolish than I've been,
In fact, I would take few things seriously.
I would be less hygienic.
I would run more risks,
take more vacations,
contemplate more sunsets,
climb more mountains, swim more rivers.
I would go to more places where I've never been,
I would eat more ice cream and fewer beans,
I would have more real problems and less imaginary ones.


I was one of those people that lived sensibly
and prolifically each minute of his life;
Of course I had moments of happiness.
If I could go back I would try
to have only good moments.


Because if you didn't know, of that is life made:
only of moments; Don't lose the now.


I was one of those that never
went anywhere without a thermometer,
a hot-water bottle,
an umbrella, and a parachute;
If I could live again, I would travel lighter.


If I could live again,
I would begin to walk barefoot from the beginning of spring
and I would continue barefoot until autumn ends.
I would take more cart rides,
contemplate more dawns,
and play with more children,
If I had another life ahead of me.


But already you see, I am 85,
and I know that I am dying.

Si pudiera vivir nuevamente mi vida. 
En la próxima trataría de cometer más errores.
No intentaría ser tan perfecto, me relajaría más. 
Sería más tonto de lo que he sido, de hecho 
tomaría muy pocas cosas con seriedad. 
Sería menos higiénico. 
Correría más riesgos, haría más viajes, contemplaría 
más atardeceres, subiría más montañas, nadaría más ríos. 
Iría a más lugares adonde nunca he ido, comería 
más helados y menos habas, tendría más problemas 
reales y menos imaginarios. 
Yo fui una de esas personas que vivió sensata y prolíficamente 
cada minuto de su vida; claro que tuve momentos de alegría. 
Pero si pudiera volver atrás trataría de tener 
solamente buenos momentos. 
Por si no lo saben, de eso está hecha la vida, sólo de momentos; 
no te pierdas el ahora. 
Yo era uno de esos que nunca iban a ninguna parte sin termómetro, 
una bolsa de agua caliente, un paraguas y un paracaídas; 
Si pudiera volver a vivir, viajaría más liviano. 
Si pudiera volver a vivir comenzaría a andar descalzo a principios 
de la primavera y seguiría así hasta concluir el otoño. 
Daría más vueltas en calesita, contemplaría más amaneceres 
y jugaría con más niños, si tuviera otra vez la vida por delante. 
Pero ya tengo 85 años y sé que me estoy muriendo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moments_(poem)

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Günter Grass - What must be said

Why have I kept silent, held back so long,

on something openly practised in
war games, at the end of which those of us
who survive will at best be footnotes?

It's the alleged right to a first strike
that could destroy an Iranian people
subjugated by a loudmouth
and gathered in organized rallies,
because an atom bomb may be being
developed within his arc of power.
Yet why do I hesitate to name
that other land in which
for years – although kept secret –
a growing nuclear power has existed
beyond supervision or verification,
subject to no inspection of any kind?
This general silence on the facts,
before which my own silence has bowed,
seems to me a troubling, enforced lie,
leading to a likely punishment
the moment it's broken:
the verdict "Anti-semitism" falls easily.
But now that my own country,
brought in time after time
for questioning about its own crimes,
profound and beyond compare,
has delivered yet another submarine to Israel
(in what is purely a business transaction,
though glibly declared an act of reparation)
whose speciality consists in its ability
to direct nuclear warheads toward
an area in which not a single atom bomb
has yet been proved to exist, its feared
existence proof enough, I'll say what must be said.
But why have I kept silent till now?
Because I thought my own origins,
tarnished by a stain that can never be removed,
meant I could not expect Israel, a land
to which I am, and always will be, attached,
to accept this open declaration of the truth.
Why only now, grown old,
and with what ink remains, do I say:
Israel's atomic power endangers
an already fragile world peace?
Because what must be said
may be too late tomorrow;
and because – burdened enough as Germans –
we may be providing material for a crime
that is foreseeable, so that our complicity
will not be expunged by any
of the usual excuses.

And granted: I've broken my silence
because I'm sick of the West's hypocrisy;
and I hope too that many may be freed
from their silence, may demand
that those responsible for the open danger
we face renounce the use of force,
may insist that the governments of
both Iran and Israel allow an international authority
free and open inspection of
the nuclear potential and capability of both.

No other course offers help
to Israelis and Palestinians alike,
to all those living side by side in enmity
in this region occupied by illusions,
and ultimately, to all of us.

Tavis Smiley and Cornel West Part 1

The Rich and the rest of us

Tavis Smiley and Cornel West -Part 2

The Rich and the rest of us

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Tavis Smiley and Cornel West on Growing Up Poor

Tavis Smiley and Cornel West discuss growing up in working-class households. "I saw so much poverty growing up," says Smiley, who lived with 13 family members in a three-bedroom trailer and learned that even when he was not optimistic, he could be hopeful.  West recalls how he worked with the Black Panthers to organize a general strike while growing up in Sacramento, California, in order to push for African-American studies programs in local high schools.  Looking at current events, Smiley and West cite Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s comment that "war is the enemy of the poor" and compare the amount of money spent in Iraq and the 2012 presidential campaign to funding for programs that assist the one in two Americans who are now poor.  

Slavoj Zizek explains why the German government gave money to Greece



"European and US governments play with democracy  but when things get serious, experts/technocrats take over  -more or less cancelling democracy"

U.S. troops posed with body parts of Afghan bombers

"It is a violation of Army standards to pose with corpses for photographs outside of officially sanctioned purposes," saidGeorge Wright, an Army spokesman. "Such actions fall short of what we expect of our uniformed service members in deployed areas."

Cornel West and Tavis Smiley -The Rich and the Rest of Us

The latest census data shows nearly one in two Americans, or 150 million people, have fallen into poverty — or could be classified as low income.  Dr. Cornel West and Tavis Smiley, spark a national dialogue on the poverty crisis with the new book, "The Rich and the Rest of Us: A Poverty Manifesto."  Smiley, an award-winning TV and radio broadcaster, says President Obama has failed to properly tackle poverty.  "There seems to be a bipartisan consensus in Washington that the poor just don’t matter. President Obama is a part of that," Smiley says. "I take nothing away from his push on healthcare, but jobs for every American should have been priority number one." West, a professor of religion and African American studies at Princeton University, says that after the historic U.S. struggles against monarchy, slavery and institutionalized racism, "the issue today is oligarchy. Poverty is the new slavery, oligarchs are the new kings — the new heads of this structure of domination."

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Declaration from Occupy San Francisco General Assembly


It has been well-established in declaration and law that all people are endowed with  inalienable rights, among them life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, freedom of expression, and freedom of assembly. We, and our descendants, share common human needs — a sustainable global ecology, adequate food, shelter, health, education, and equal opportunity to fulfill our potential.

Through a deliberate series of attacks, these rights and basic necessities are being stolen from us by the economic elite in Washington, London, Wall Street and other centers where money and power consolidate.

We have no redress from our government, as it is busy ensuring the health, prosperity, and security of corporations and financial institutions while ignoring and actively working against the basic needs of the People. In light of this, a call was made to occupy Wall Street on the 17th of September, 2011. From Liberty Square in New York City to the Financial District in San Francisco, we answered that call, occupying with determination and solidarity.

To reclaim our rights, we collectively confront a monolithic government, a parasitic financial system, and a military industrial juggernaut, all of which command overwhelming economic power and seemingly insurmountable physical and legal force. We confront these entities with courageous nonviolent civil disobedience. By occupying public space, mobilizing people, and transforming public discourse, we shine the light of truth on the situation at hand.

Financial institutions have become parasites of the economic system.  Instead of functioning as a buttress for the economy, they have constructed mechanisms that allow them to plunder the world’s wealth and divert it directly into their pockets. By abusing the money creation powers of the Federal Reserve, manipulating domestic and international financial markets, and creating risky, deceptive, and dangerous investment products, they accumulate staggering wealth and power, leaving in their wake global economic devastation.

Multi-national corporations are equally guilty.  Under the guise of fair competition, they take an unfair proportion of produced wealth.  When true competition threatens their power, they crush it.  They achieve global hegemony by using our armed forces as personal enforcers and looting the public treasury to fund their empires.  They befoul and contaminate the air we breathe, the waters we drink, and the soil that gives us life. The Earth’s resources are destroyed and depleted for their insatiable avarice.

To continue accumulating obscene wealth, these culprits commit horrendous economic, political, and environmental crimes.  To perpetuate these crimes and escape accountability, they deploy their vast ill-gotten wealth to buy control of our society and government at all levels, undermining the tools and abilities we have available to us to resist effectively.
  • They buy the loyalty and votes of politicians through lobbying and corruption to create laws and regulations favoring the financial and corporate interests at the People’s expense.
  • They influence the judicial system to interpret and enforce those laws and regulations primarily to their benefit, even going so far as to grant corporations the rights of people.
  • They buy or neutralize government regulatory bodies tasked with protecting the People’s and economy’s health.
  • They buy university curricula and research, particularly in science and economics, to advance their agenda.
  • They influence the creation of, and even draft, anti-Constitutional legislation that punishes or inhibits those who publicly protest their misdeeds.
  • They buy and consolidate the print and broadcast media to inhibit diversity of ideas and opinions and ensure mass media conformity to their agenda.
  • They manipulate the political process and the media, demonizing our differences in ethnicity, skin color, gender, age, sexual orientation, nationality, political affiliation, and religion to separate us from our natural allies.
  • They seek Internet censorship laws to eliminate the last bastion of free media and organizational tools for the People.
  • They fabricate pretexts to divert excessive public resources into wars of choice, and the weapons and personnel to wage them.
  • And they inflict debt slavery on the people of other nations by using the IMF and World Bank as their foreign arms of operation.

Because these financial institutions and multinational corporations have committed these crimes, the government, the corporate media, and the prevailing ideology no longer represent the People.

We, the People, are left to suffer the staggering costs that these financial institutions and multinational corporations inflict — on the economy, political process, and the environment.
  • We suffer from a shrinking middle class, rising unemployment, insecure jobs, diminishing wages, retirement plans looted by Wall Street, a decline of living conditions, and a slide toward poverty.
  • We suffer from millions of fraudulent home foreclosures and evictions that have devastated our communities and families.
  • We suffer the costs of fighting and financing unnecessary wars, and the inadequate support our government provides for veterans.
  • We suffer from an exorbitantly expensive and inefficient health care system, leaving us at the mercy of employers and insurance companies who can arbitrarily deny, or prohibitively price, the coverage our very lives depend on.
  • We suffer from decimated lands and imperiled wildlife caused by the unsustainable rape of the environment.
  • We suffer from food and water supplies laced with poisonous runoff and unhealthy additives, due to woefully inadequate government regulation.
  • We suffer from an increasingly inaccessible college education system that results in decades of crushing student debt and extremely limited job prospects after graduation.
  • We suffer from a brutal austerity regimen resulting in ever-worsening K-12 education, imploding social services, and crumbling infrastructure.
  • We suffer incalculable personal and community devastation due to the reckless privatization of public necessities, including education, healthcare, and even prisons.
  • And we suffer from a broken political system where moneyed interests are represented, but the People and communities are not.


We, the People, are fed up with this unwarranted suffering. We can no longer idly stand by, with indifference and apathy, watching our rights, our economic security and our shared environmental heritage being torn from us.  We answered the call to Occupy because all of us can agree that these profound wrongs must be righted.

Occupy is both the conversation and the space to make meaningful change happen. Occupy is a big tent and all are welcome to help us create the solutions for a better world. Whether it’s removing money from politics, transforming the economic system, or advocating for a more just and equitable society,  we have the energy and we have the ideas, but the most important thing we need is your passion! You have more power than you’ve been led to believe, and your voice is more needed than you think. These are the days when we must speak out, no matter how our voices shake.

As we grow, the criminal financial institutions, multinational corporations, and their government lackeys will continue to attempt to silence us.  But our resolve and purpose will only grow stronger.  They can tear down a tent, they can eject a body, but they cannot evict an idea once it is rooted in the hearts and minds of a People.  We are an expression of hope and solidarity for a better tomorrow. We are the cry that has found a voice, and that is the voice of the People. We invite you to join your voice with ours. Let us stand together and let it be known that we we will not go quietly into the night. We are Occupy!

Note: This declaration was unanimously passed at the OccupySF General Assembly on 5 April 2012. It is an official document of Occupy San Francisco. It was authored through consensus by the OccupySF Ideological Liberation working group (formerly OccupySF Research and OccupySF Ideological Warfare). Although this is presented in text format, it is intended for wide distribution via flier, pamphlet, and other electronic means. We invite other Occupations to adopt this document wholly or edit as they see fit and use it as the seed for your own homegrown declaration. Please spread far and wide!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Toni Morrison -I'm not somebody else's version of who I am

The idea for a novel about a black girl made to feel so ugly by the culture around her that she prays for blue eyes, came out of an encounter Morrison had as a child. A fellow classmate confided to her the same dream of blue eyes, which, even as a 12-year-old, struck Morrison as grotesquely self-loathing. She remembered it. "I wanted to know how she got to that place."
She was Chloe Wofford then; Toni was a nickname that came out of her baptismal name, Anthony (after St Anthony), which she took at 12 when she joined the Catholic church. She knew who she was and puts it down to a combination of class – in her town, they were all poor together, black, white, Polish, Spanish – living in the same streets and attending the same high schools. Her parents were also fiercely resistant to outside influence. For a while, her family was on food aid, or "relief" as it was then known, a word Morrison finds preferable to today's language. "I liked that word. Because it was, like, it's just a pause. You're going to be all right, it's just 'relief'. And I remember my mother got some cornmeal or something and it had bugs in it. She wrote a letter to Franklin D Roosevelt. And his office answered! And the woman who dealt out this crap came to see my mother, and my mother said, 'You're giving us food with bugs in it?!' She was the type who tore eviction notices off the door."

She was not obliged, he said, to live as they saw her in their imagination. 


http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/apr/13/toni-morrison-home-son-love?INTCMP=SRCH

Friday, April 13, 2012

Learning to Play. How do you recover from betrayal?

Though the social contract is a myth, betrayal involves shock, disappointment and re-evaluation of one's belief system. 
Almost every betrayal makes the persons look back over their past to try to determine what caused it. This reflection almost inevitably leads to self-blame and guilt.  Although the person may express anger at not being treated well, underneath this anger is a sense that she must be unworthy.
Betrayal is the violation of a presumptive social contract that produces moral and psychological conflict within a relationship.
Adultery is the most common type of betrayal, but any type of relationship can end in betrayal.
This linear path between betrayal and unworthiness is how deception causes so much damage.
Generally speaking, the greater the trust that one puts in another person, the greater the impact the betrayal has.  This impact results in anger, despair and fear


http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/learning-play/201001/betrayalhttp://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/learning-play/201001/betrayal

The Rich Are Different from You and Me – They Pay Less Taxes

“For Big Companies, Life Is Good”  
Big US companies have emerged from the deepest recession since World War II more profitable than ever: flush with cash, less burdened by debt, and with a greater share of the country’s income. But, the paper notes, “Many of the 1.1 million jobs the big companies added since 2007 were outside the U.S. So, too, was much of the $1.2 trillion added to corporate treasuries.” 
Corporate taxes today are at a 40-year-low -- even as the executive suites at big corporations have become throne rooms where the crown jewels wind up in the personal vault of the CEO.
Last year, among the 100 best-paid CEOs, the median income was more than $14 million, compared with the average annual American salary of $45,230. Combined, this happy hundred executives pulled down more than two billion dollars.
While ordinary Americans are taxed at a top rate of 35% on their income, Congress allows hedge fund and private equity tycoons to pay only pay 15% of their compensation. 


http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/04/13

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Isabel Allende -The island beneath the sea

Haiti, slavery, New Orleans, Zarite
It is always magic realism when it is somebody else religion


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDL8REXdfn4&NR=1&feature=endscreen

Haruki Murakami -Found in translation



Police Force 'Very Dysfunctional'




http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/04/11-7

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Wittgenstein's philosophy of psychology


Meaning something, wanting, intending, understanding, explaining the meaning of an expression,
knowing what an expression means, believing things to be so, interpreting
Thought and thinking, expectation, wish and their fulfilment, current experience, pain and idealism
To find new solutions to the same problems, agreement with reality
The nature of language and linguistic representation
The meaning of an expression is its use, and it is its use that gives it life
To resolve/to dissolve.  (Re)solution, dissolution and illusion
Philosophy, a contribution not to human knowledge but to human understanding
It is incorrect to say that the relationship between a name and an object is psychological
Intra-grammatical resolution.  Psychology, the study of psychological phenomena,
is irrelevant to logical investigations
Pain, joy, depression, thought, intention, etc. are not hidden behind the painful movement,
joyful smile, depressed mien and tone, expression of thought, intentional action, etc.
The psychologist does not observe them "indirectly", and the subject does not observe them
"directly" -since she does not observe them at all
Thought and experience do not rest on introspection (indeed, the very idea that they do
depends on a misconception of introspection).  They rest on nothing at all
The subject of psychological attributes is not the ego, the mind or the body,
but the animal as a whole


http://info.sjc.ox.ac.uk/scr/hacker/docs/TheDevelopmentOfWittgensteinsPhilosophyOfPsychology.pdf

http://info.sjc.ox.ac.uk/scr/hacker/docs/Philosophy%20for%20RIP.pdf

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Top five regrets of the dying