Finally a story of not selling out

Man Turns Down Billions for His Ancestral Homeland:

Just one man, 36-year-old Jeffrey Lee, holds the title to this unfathomably valuable piece of real estate – and he says it’s not for sale.

Lee, an Australian Aborigine, won’t condone the destruction of his ancestral land at any cost. As the sole survivor of the Djok clan, he believes that he has a grave responsibility to protect Koongarra and the rest of his tribe’s native lands from harm.

“There are sacred sites, there are burial sites and there are other special places out there which are my responsibility to look after,” Lee told The Sydney Morning Herald.

So, rather than rubbing elbows with Donald Trump and Richard Branson on the Forbes billionaire list, Lee has rejected all requests to purchase Koongarra. He is committed to protecting it from uranium mining, which would poison the land and destroy its fragile ecosystem.

It’s a shocking choice, to be sure – but Lee has no need for a fleet of yachts, his own island, or any other trappings of the decadent life. His desire is simply to preserve the legacy of his ancestral tribe.

So instead of selling Koongarra to a mining company, Lee plans to incorporate his homeland into Kakadu National Park, where “it will be protected and safe forever,” he said.

Lee’s incredible sacrifice isn’t just about salvaging the past: It’s about protecting the future, too. Even though he has no children yet, he believes that access to the sacred ancestral land is the greatest gift that he can provide for his future offspring.

“I was taken all through here on the shoulder of my grandmother,” said Lee. “I heard all the stories and learnt everything about this land, and I want to pass it all on to my kids.”

Quotable: Rollins on selling out

Henry-Rollins-Posters
This is how I remember Rollins (not the gym guy with a massive neck). Image link.

A miscellaneous Henry Rollins quote that surfaced on the Web like digital driftwood on the cybernetic beach. Here he discusses “selling out” a major theme from the punk days that essentially defined ones legitimacy within the scene. I wrote an essay about the issue entitled, A Community is Not a Demographic. Anyhow, I think he makes some good points, but was surprised to see that he is a fan of punk music in commercials. From Mother Jones:

HR: [Punk] gave music back to people. For a long time, when I was very young, I went to go see arena rock bands. I was 16 and it was all I could get in to see, legally. And I saw Led Zeppelin and Ted Nugent and Van Halen and all that. Me and [Minor Threat and Fugazi vocalist] Ian MacKaye would go to these concerts, and it was fun. You know, seeing Led Zeppelin did not suck, in the least. And then punk rock came along and all of a sudden you are standing five feet away from Dee Dee Ramone or the Bad Brains, or you’re carrying in the gear with the band, or now you’re in the band, and so music became this very immediate thing to me, where I could experience it from a very close-up vantage point instead of bringing binoculars, which I literally did to see Led Zeppelin. So I think it actualized music for a lot of young people. If you wrote the band, they would write back. You could meet the band. It became this thing that was a part of your life, not this thing that you paid a ticket for and through peanuts at. And that to me was huge. I think a lot of people became very inspired by that ethic of, you know, I’m gonna confront authority and really see what that’s all about, and question authority, read between the lines, and be suspicious. And I never heard that in a Ted Nugent record.

Where did it fail? I don’t know that it failed, I think it kind of just got absorbed into popular mainstream. When you hear a Stooges track or a Buzzcocks track or a Ramones track or a track by the Fall, or what have you, in a car ad, some people, whenever that happens, I get a letter saying “What a sellout.” And I say “no man, we’ve arrived.” The person making that ad grew up on that music. You’re no longer confined to interstitial, instrumental music, you’re gonna get Iggy Pop and the Teddy Bears singing I’m a punk rocker to sell a car. What would you rather hear? Some wanky keyboard or Iggy and the Teddy Bears? I know which one I’d rather hear, and I just hope they get paid quickly and double scale, because it’s about time. I don’t so much see the failure in as much as that anything that has been around for 30 years or more.

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Extending McLuhan

Marshall Mcluhan

My main man, McLuhan
The PBS site MediaShift is generally an excellent place to read about new media ideas. This week guest columnist Bob Logan, who is a member of the Media Ecology Association, writes a very lucid update about Marshall McLuhan’s ideas as they apply to new media. What follows is a highlight, but I’d read the whole article. I think it’s one of the best explanations of McLuhan’s ideas I’ve seen in plain language.

MediaShift . Extending McLuhan::The 14 Messages of New Media | PBS:

New media today seem to have 14 distinct messages that intertwine and support each other. Digitization makes interoperability, two-way communication, ease of access to information, continuous learning, convergence, aggregation of content, remix culture and the transition from products to services possible. Aggregation of content leads to variety and choice, The Long Tail, community, social collectivity and cooperation. Remix and digitization helps close the gap between user and producer, which in turn builds community, variety and choice. Ease of access and dissemination of information leads to continuous learning; social collectivity and cooperation; remix culture; and the closing of the gap between user and producer.

If McLuhan were around today, I think he would see the impact of new media as an extension of his observations on the impact of the early electronic media. And in fact the effects seem to be even more intense with new media than they were for electronic mass media. Examples of the intensification of effects with new media include McLuhan’s observations that with electronic media:

1. our involvement with each other would increase,
2. social structures and access to information would decentralize,
3. “consumer becomes producer as the public becomes participant role player,”
4. the media become extensions of our psyches,
5. “the entire business of man becomes learning and knowing,”
6. there is a growth of interdisciplinarity,
7. a melting of national borders and the rise of a global village, and
8. “Men are suddenly nomadic gatherers of knowledge, nomadic as never before — but also involved in the total social process as never before; since with electricity we extend our central nervous system globally, instantly interrelating every human experience”

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Language is a virus


OK, so this is sooooo ’80s, but you know, in retrospect Laurie Anderson is pretty cool. I saw her give a talk last year at the New School about her stint as a NASA resident artist (yes, it does did exist!) and thought she was one of the most grounded and humane people I have seen onstage. This video comes by way of my Internet search for the origins of the William S Burroughs’ quote: “Language is a virus from outer space…”

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Quotable: Sir Ken Robinson


H/T to DK of MediaSnackers for turning me on to Sir Ken Robinson whose views on education and creativity mirror my own. Fortunately he is more articulate than I am, so when you watch him give his TED talk he can explain this big darn mess in much simpler language than I. Click here for his home page.

“We are educating people out of their creativity.”

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Quotable: Derrick de Kerckhove

An Interview with Derrick de Kerckhove, director of the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology, and author of one of my favorite books on media, The Skin of Culture. He discusses the impact of new technologies on the way we perceive and act in the world.

de Kerckhove Interview – Communication in Evolution – Social and Technological Transformation:

AB: We have left the “global village”, we surf the Web of Webs but the technical abilities of the average citizen are not much greater than those of a Neanderthal. Beneath the veneer of culture, what sort of human being is this digital culture creating?

DdeK: The average citizen is always in Neanderthal mode. That is why we get such Neanderthalian politicians. The digital culture is the cognitive phase of electricity. Just as we took the muscular phase (heat, light and energy) for granted, we are taking this new phase for granted. Most people only worry about how their body works when they have a backache, or about their car when they have to bring it to the garage. And even then, they don’t want to know. But there is hope. The transformation is happening just as surely and unconsciously as it did at the time of the council of Trent when wise people were trying to put an old order into a religion that was being rapidly undermined by a totally new conception of man. Today, we are literally run over by the globalized and connective condition of humankind without the slightest moment of doubt.

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Free Paris!

Paris-Nappy

So, this might surprise you, but I support wholeheartedly the insipid commentary and coverage of Paris Hilton’s prison term. Many in the Left have derided the media for wasting so much time on her, but I find it curious that they are vicariously covering Paris by criticizing the press’ coverage. I think that’s a bit hypocritical. There is nothing wrong with a guilty pleasure such as this.

The chief argument is that when so many people are getting killed everyday in Iraq, why not spend the ink or pixels on the victims of war? Well the problem is that many do not identify with abstract numbers or concepts. They are interested in the drama of people who they are familiar with. One way to address this gap in coverage would be to have more stories on non-glamorous people in war zones. I was disappointed post-9/11 when the New York Times features only profiles of those killed in the Twin Towers and not of those civilians killed in Afghanistan from “our” bombs. No doubt firemen and police officers have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan as a result of our war-making efforts. Would we think differently about war if we identified with the victims of “collateral damage”?

I think it’s worth acknowledging the fact that the new media reality promotes a mythological consciousness. For too long our culture has been bogged down by science and facts to our detriment. Somewhere along the way we lost our bearings and sense of purpose. Now, I don’t particularly agree with the philosophy of our new myths, but let the people speak and have their pop culture too! I worry that media critics are becoming too much like Maoists or Jehovah Witnesses. In my book, personal tragedy and drama is the stuff of life. So maybe it is not as artful as Shakespeare, but I think we can admit that we all get a small thrill by living through others as they destroy themselves. The fact that the high and mighty can fall to Earth is a small reality check for the masses that even the rich and famous are subject to the laws of gravity. The obsession with these particular “debucelebs” has a lot to do with this sense of equanimity.

Incidentally, the above image is of a “pano” (the Chicano vernacular for handkerchief prison art) supposedly created by Paris. These days I don’t believe anything, so I don’t know if she really made it with a smuggled ballpoint pen. But…. if she did it is an interesting commentary on the two things that are her particular lifeline, a phone and being on TV. Compare that with the art made by other prisoners and you’ll discover different themes, often religious, but usually about lost love. Perhaps this is a story about another kind of lost love: the one in the media mirror.

PS Speaking of Mao, there was a faux pas committed by Cameron Diaz when she showed up in Peru with a handbag featuring Mao’s likeness. It’s sad that Cameron was unaware of the tragic history of the Shinning Path movement, and even sadder that she is unaware of Mao’s history. Goes to show the truism that in postmodern times signs are drained of content in order to live on as fashion accessories.

PPS When I originally wrote this I forgot to say that one of the main reasons people are upset about the Pairs phenom is because evening news is having an identity crisis. It used to be that if the authorities from mass media, i.e. Walter Cronkite, spoke the truth about the facts, then democracy would properly thrive. I think people are having a hard time coming to terms with the fact that TV news is entertainment. My advice, get over it and build new models.

The heretics we love

Bruno
Scuse me while I reblog. Daily Galaxy‘s post on Giordano Bruno caught my attention because I’ve seen his likeness around Rome several times. The statue in this image is rather dour. This picture is interesting because of the contrast between the ever-serious gaze of Bruno (which pierces you when standing beneath the statue) and the ridiculous models in the ad behind him. I find it interesting how women in these fashion shoots are always in such uncomfortable bodily positions; it makes me wonder (beyond the implicit meaning that women should be tortured to look good) how anyone finds these images attractive. It is a contrast of worlds in which public space evolves and is contested by different media. Here it is a case of a celebrated heretic versus some Gucci girls, both having been tortured by the respective authorities of their time.

PS Bruno was a Hologroker. Check him out!

Giordano Bruno’s Heresy: Infinite Galaxies, Infinite Life | The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond:

Smack in the center of the Rome’s fashionable Campo de Fiori is a statue of Giordano Bruno, philosopher. Bruno held that God was present in nature and that the universe and life was infinite. The Catholic Church burned him at the stake, right where his statue is today.

“The general opinion is not always the perfect truth…” Giordano Bruno is still quoted. Such remarks produced expensive, bitter consequences: On 17th of February 1600 he publicly was burnt at the stake after eight years of torture and dungeon detention. Today the Piazza Campo dei Fiori where this statue stands has become a monument to free thinking; adjacent to the statue, is the “Fahrenheit 451″

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Mailer vs. McLuan

Medium

From the fantastic blog DailyGalaxy, this tasty little morsel of a video featuring a debate between Marshal McLuhan and Norman Mailer.

See the video here.

Quest for Identity in the Digital Village -Daily Video Classic | The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond:

McLuhan, a Canadian a philosopher, professor of English literature, literary critic, and communications theorist who died in 1980, was the first person to popularize the concept of a global village and to consider its social effects. His insights were revolutionary at the time, and fundamentally changed how everyone has thought about media, technology, and communications ever since. McLuhan chose the phrase “global village” (a harbinger of the Internet Era and the conflicts we’re currently experiencing-violence, alienation, life in the electromic envelope) to highlight his observation that an electronic nervous system was rapidly integrating the planet — events in one part of the world could be experienced from other parts in real-time, which is what human experience was like when we lived in small villages.

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RIP: Jean Baudrillard

Baudrillard
(Feferberg/AFP)

May he live on in simulation….

La mort de Jean Baudrillard:

Jean Baudrillard s’est éteint mardi à Paris, à l’âge de 77 ans, a annoncé son entourage.
Né le 20 juillet 1929 à Reims, germaniste de formation et traducteur de Brecht, Jean Baudrillard a enseigné la sociologie à partir de 1966 à l’Université de Nanterre. Il a élaboré, au cours des trente dernières années, une critique radicale des médias et de la société de consommation.
Sociologue de renommée internationale, Jean Baudrillard est l’auteur d’une cinquantaine de livres, dont le célèbre «La société de consommation», en 1970.

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MLK today

Mlk
These days Martin Luther King Jr. has been so drained of meaning that he is cynically appropriated by parties as diverse as the Republicans and Chevy (some of you may have seen the recent John Mellencamp Chevy ad (click here to view) that argues through its strategic deployment of symbols that Chevy and American dissent are inseparable). But let us not forget MLK’s highly critical attack against the Vietnam War. I encourage all to read the speech, “Beyond Vietnam: Beyond the Violence,” which could easily have been written today. The following three lines are the most precise deconstruction of our current system that you will ever read:

Rev. Martin Luther King, Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence:

I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a “thing-oriented” society to a “person-oriented” society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.

PS. I found some great MLK quotes at this Peak Oil site. It’s worth checking out.