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Results of the October Readership Poll - PEOPLE OF THE MILLENNIUM:
Awwww man...questions like this are damn near impossible to answer. The list will be weighted toward the post-Industrial Revolution for obvious reasons. All yours (except Lawrence Durrell, I gotta go look him up now) plus:
Looking forward to seeing the results,
"Contribute to others, rather than converting others." -- HH Dalai Lama
Yeah, add him too.
That's Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre. And where's de Sade? Remember when we talked about Benjamin Franklin versus de Sade? Ten, huh? That's a tall order. These are broad and generalized assessments and not in chronological order. Francis of Assisi (saved Christianity and the invisible--good or bad?) Martin Luther and Martin Luther King, Jr. fall under his aegis Adolph Hitler (showed us the depths of human evil) Genghis Khan, etc. Descartes (primary author of Western rationalistic dualism)--Hume nailed the mother and Wittgenstein walked away from the grave, but Descartes is still the name for philosophers and scientists, Newton et al. Freud (showed us the myth of rationalism was a delicate myth)--I prefer Jung, even Adler, and the gods bless James Hillman, but Freud started it in the popular mind though he stole most of his material; even Madonna and Presley fall under Freud's shadow--the whole deconstruction thing starts here and the appreciation of the Other (which encompasses my obvious lacunae regarding other cultural heroes); yes, he was strongly influenced by Goethe and the Romantics which brings us to the next two Elizabeth I (that Woman Rules) so many strong women proving it wasn't a man's world and that an individual's personal power matters, but her name sums it up... Read the full commentary in G21 October Readership Poll Results |
JENNIFER BLUE on Television Culture:
My neighbor,
We unplugged the life force of our television as if confronted with a brain dead-parent, sibling or child. We didn't merely perform last rites for the television set within our livingroom, we got radical and severed the umbilical cord of television media from our home. I sometimes regret that my act of refusal lacked the drama and pathos of my neighbor or Elvis Presley; in this epoch outrageousness seems to be the only way to convey one's real or fictional convictions.
Sometimes death is a relief.
American television spiraled into a coma a long time ago. With few exceptions it is a grotesque device of mass manipulation. In this truculent Information Age, sensational diversions are more dense, insistent and despotic. Violent attacks on other nations are stylized like a movie of the week replete with demonic antagonists and false idols. The misery of humanity is trotted out like a freak show so that political agendas may be more readily received and embraced. We believe we are participants in a democratic society as we write our opinions to the op-ed sections of mainstream periodicals, as we channel and parrot the assigned roles in the latest debacle. Nazi propagandist Goebbels knew the power of media; he is snickering in his grave. If you sit quietly you can hear Goebbels snickering; tee hee hee. Mainstream media assigns the topic dujour like a demented school master and then we brawl amongst ourselves within a prison of opinion. Does mainstream media reflect the collective psyche or does mainstream media sculpt the collective psyche?
There are some concerned American citizens who want to regulate, that is Censor, television programming. These concerned citizens are convinced that any entertainment featuring violence spurs acts of real violence in the supposedly real world. Meanwhile the real world has been dressed-up and perfumed like an reluctant debutante. Alas, the painful underside of spurious, amusement park life-styles demand our attention like tragic shots heard round the world. ....
Read the full commentary in CultureCast |
Our Publisher provides his usual ruminations ... (CONTINUED INSIDE.)
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EDITION 187
(G21 EUROPE has RASTISLAV DURMAN's commentary on protests in Bratislava, the elections in Austria, and how Life competes with fiction for the bizarre; KEVIN CAREY looks at California justice and calls its veiled racism in DAY ONE.)
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