Rango

Let’s face it: I am a lazy bum. As I look at this site, it seems as if I totally, utterly and completely forgot that I intended to write reviews of all the cultural artifacts I consumed. And even though time is limited and I do not read, look and listen as much I would like to — I surely have read, seen and heard more than what has been reflected here. So: laziness. But here is a review: Rango. One of the best movies I saw this year.

Rating: 5 of 5★★★★★

Read more...

7 days ago:

 

13 days ago:

 

Twinkle, twinkle

As I zip along in Google Reader, I trend to star one item after the other – always anticipating that I will comment on this blog of mine quite soon. Alas, soon tends never to happen, and the Starred Items list keeps growing. So, time for a quickie cleaning:

  • Journey into a Libertarian Future: Part VI – Certainty (Earlier parts recommended as well – links in the post.) ‘Thus we see that the welfare state promotes the proliferation of intellectually and morally inferior people, and the results would be even worse were it not for the fact that crime rates are particularly high among these people, and that they tend to eliminate each other more frequently.’ – a verbatim quote from Hans-Hermann Hoppe. Not even the most chiling one, at that.
  • We are in this together Norman Geras has an on-going series (or so it seems) about (in)equality. This is a thoughtful entry, and a short discussing with some points made by Joshua Cohen.
  • Inequality and Schools Related, from Crooked Timber. ‘Can anyone credibly believe that the mediocre overall performance of American students on international tests is unrelated to the fact that one-fifth of American children live in poverty?’
  • A Left Take on the Euro Crisis ‘So what should democratic socialists do? First, argue for a recasting of the role of the European Central Bank to include pursuit of growth as well as stability. Second, press for a fairer sharing of the pain of austerity by ensuring that the rich pay more, starting with a Tobin tax. And third, demand a massive increase in the powers of the European Parliament, the only Europe-wide democratic institution, to maximise accountability of the new economic policy regime.’ Exactly.
  • Ten Growth Markets for Crisis ‘Let’s outline some key social trends, some growing ideological markets and some possible future scenarios as the class-war continues to warm up. These aren’t predictions, as such – they are attempts to open up our understanding of our current situation as ideologies come crashing down around us. We need to write new stories about how we got here, who we are, and how we’re going to cope with what is to come. Let’s turn tendencies into trends; turn trends into Tendencies.’
  • The 1 Percent, Revealed ‘The liberal elite, insisted conservative intellectuals, looked down on “ordinary” middle- and working-class Americans, finding them tasteless and politically incorrect. The “elite” was the enemy, while the superrich were just like everyone else, only more “focused” and perhaps a bit better connected.’ But the blinkers are beginning to drop. One hopes, at least.

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26 days ago:

The mower stalled, twice; kneeling, I found
A hedgehog jammed up against the blades,
Killed. It had been in the long grass.

I had seen it before, and even fed it, once.
Now I had mauled its unobtrusive world
Unmendably. Burial was no help:

Next morning I got up and it did not.
The first day after a death, the new absence
Is always the same; we should be careful

Of each other, we should be kind
While there is still time.

Philip Larkin

  • Good one: ‘“You work in sales for a mobile phone company. I work as a teacher.”

    “Yes, my taxes pay for your salary.”

    “But my mobile phone bill pays for your salary. If the government nationalised Vodafone – stranger things have happened – and privatised the school system, my taxes would be paying for your salary while my employer would be sending you a bill for my teaching of your children. But we’d still be paying each other. This is a modern economy. Everybody pays for everybody else’s salary, except the subsistence farmers and survivalists, who look after themselves.”’ (from Fat Man on a Keyboard)

    # 29 days ago

32 days ago:

Almost the weekend. Hurrah.

 

Hot afternoons

A poem that I have always liked very much:

And there have been hot afternoons, all through time, history, 
     as men say; 
Hot afternoons have been in Montana. 
There have been hot afternoons, and quiet, soft, lovely twilights; 
Gray, Collins, Milton wrote of these; 
There have been hot afternoons in quiet English churchyards, 
     and hot afternoons in America, in Montana; and green 
     everywhere and bright sky; there are deserts in Africa, 
     America, and Australia; 
Clear air is healthful; men go to Colorado, near Wyoming, 
     near Montana in the mountains, sick men go to the 
     mountains where Indians once lived, fought and killed 
     each other. 
O, the love of bodies, O, the pains of bodies on hot, quiet 
     afternoons, everywhere in the world. 
Men work in factories on hot afternoons, now in Montana, 
     and now in New Hampshire; walk the streets of Boston 
     on hot afternoons; 
Novels stupid and forgot, have been written in afternoons; 
Matinées of witty comedies in London and New York are in 
     afternoons; 
Indians roamed here, in this green field, on quiet, hot afternoons, 
     in years now followed by hundreds of years. 
Hot afternoons are real; afternoons are; places, things, thoughts, 
     feelings are; poetry is; 
The world is waiting to be known; Earth, what it has in it! 
     The past is in it; 
All words, feelings, movements, words, bodies, clothes, girls, 
     trees, stones, things of beauty, books, desires are in it; 
     and all are to be known; 
Afternoons have to do with the whole world; 
And the beauty of mind, feeling knowingly the world! 
The world of girls’ beautiful faces, bodies and clothes, quiet 
     afternoons, graceful birds, great words, tearful music, 
     mind-joying poetry, beautiful livings, loved things, known 
     things: a to-be-used and known and pleasure-to-be giving 
     world. 
(Eli Siegel)

Also, from the same author:

Martin Luther King
Is with John Brown.
Look up: you’ll see them both
Looking down —
Deep and so wide
At us.
(They Look at Us)

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33 days ago:

The sound says that freedom exists
and someone pays no tax to Caesar.

Tomas Tranströmer

  • Union Seeks Legal Advice On Clarkson Comments: ‘Prime Minister David Cameron, a personal friend of the TV host, has dismissed the comments as “silly”.
    He said: “It was obviously a silly thing to say and I am sure he didn’t mean that.”’ Haha – that is about the lamest excuse ever. As if Clarkson has not visited this territory before. I say: take him outside and shoot him.

    # 33 days ago

34 days ago:

There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What’s up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don’t think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!

Terry Pratchett

44 days ago:

 

45 days ago:

 

Free Will And Testament

Given free will but within certain limitations,
I cannot will myself to limitless mutations,
I cannot know what I would be if I were not me,
I can only guess me.

So when I say that I know me, how can I know that?
What kind of spider understands arachnophobia?
I have my senses and my sense of having senses.
Do I guide them? Or they me?

The weight of dust exceeds the weight of settled objects.
What can it mean, such gravity without a centre?
Is there freedom to un-be?
Is there freedom from will-to-be?

Sheer momentum makes us act this way or that way.
We just invent or just assume a motivation.
I would disperse, be disconnected. Is this possible?
What are soldiers without a foe?

Be in the air, but not be air, be in the no air.
Be on the loose, neither compacted nor suspended.
Neither born nor left to die.

Had I been free, I could have chosen not to be me.
Demented forces push me madly round a treadmill.
Demented forces push me madly round a treadmill.
Let me off please, I am so tired.
Let me off please, I am so very tired.

— Robert Wyatt

Not your standard rock lyrics…

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64 days ago:

Not half bad.

 

85 days ago:

Wunderbar.

 

92 days ago:

Being rather swamped with work and other things, I have (miraculously) managed to relax by post-processing photos and updating the vanity photo gallery.

 

102 days ago:

Not entirely kosher, is it?

 

102 days ago:

“Alfred Hitchcock’s cameo appearances “ All of them in 3:50.

 

Catching up

It has been a long summer, and a long break from writing anything here. On the other hand, having this break – for any number of reasons, up to and including being a lazy bum – spared me from having to comment on all kinds of events that I had little new to add to anyway. But I did find a few noteworthy things that I shall no longer hesitate to share with you:

A matter of life and death:

Intoxicated by the beauty of the Greek star-lit night and by not a little of the cheap draught wine, it is easy to feel the privilege of life. Yet that is what an emancipatory politics is about, life over death. Even though we will all succumb one day, the time that we are granted should be a heaven on earth and not a living hell.

Helmut Schmidt on Deutsche Bank:

Investment banker is a nothing more than a synonym for the type of financial manager who dragged all of us – practically the entire world – into the shit and now is in the process of repeating exactly what he was doing up to 2007.

Mainstream Economist: Marx Was Right. Capitalism May Be Destroying Itself:

Karl Marx had it right. At some point, Capitalism can destroy itself. You cannot keep on shifting income from labor to Capital without having an excess capacity and a lack of aggregate demand. That’s what has happened. We thought that markets worked. They’re not working. The individual can be rational. The firm, to survive and thrive, can push labor costs more and more down, but labor costs are someone else’s income and consumption. That’s why it’s a self-destructive process.

The mega-rich have been ‘coddled long enough by a billionaire-friendly Congress.’:

No, that’s not some tax-the-rich liberal speaking. It’s mega-investor Warren Buffett. Worth $50bn, Buffet called for higher rates for those who earn $1 billion or more in the US, said that it was wrong that the middle and lower classes paid a far higher proportion of their incomes than the rich. “While the poor and middle class fight for us in Afghanistan, and while most Americans struggle to make ends meet, we mega-rich continue to get our extraordinary tax breaks…These and other blessings are showered upon us by legislators in Washington who feel compelled to protect us, much as if we were spotted owls or some other endangered species. It’s nice to have friends in high places,” he wrote. “Our leaders have asked for “shared sacrifice.” But when they did the asking, they spared me. I checked with my mega-rich friends to learn what pain they were expecting. They, too, were left untouched.”
He went on to say “I have worked with investors for 60 years and I have yet to see anyone — not even when capital gains rates were 39.9 percent in 1976-77 — shy away from a sensible investment because of the tax rate on the potential gain. People invest to make money, and potential taxes have never scared them off.”

The Food Casino:

More than 150 nations run a deficit on their food trade – they import more food than export it. The food deficit is worse than the oil deficit, measured by global food import dependence. No Einstein is needed to point out , it is not possible to have a world made up of countries all of which are net food importers. By 2017 on current trends, the USA will be running a net trade deficit on food and agricultural products.
Global agribusiness is very comparable to, and dependent on global banking. Through massive corporate consolidation in agriculture, food and farming, coordinated and convergent global food regulations, and chaff dollars euro and yen thrown on the gaming play tables of unrestrained food commodity speculation, agribusiness creates food shortage, and has a vested interest in food price explosions. Commodity-oriented agribusiness is a corporate profit tool, but farmers net few or no gains from this. Farmers are low-tech debt-serfs in the low income countries, and are high-tech debt-serfs in the high income countries.

UK riots were product of consumerism and will hit economy, says City broker:

“We conclude that the rioting reflects a deeply flawed economic and social ethos… recklessly borrowed consumption, the breakdown both of top-end accountability and of trust in institutions, and severe failings by governments over more than two decades.”

On the Wonders of Globalization:

I recently finished reading Dani Rodrik’s The Globalization Paradox: Democracy & the Future of the World Economy (W.W. Norton, 2011) and highly recommend it. Rodrik argues that one cannot simultaneously have national sovereignty, democracy and “deep globalization.” He does so via a brief for institutional pluralism and economic experimentation. Not surprisingly, I find his argument pretty persuasive. Today in the papers there are two reports that highlight the sorts of tension Rodrik identifies in particular contexts: the first is here at The Guardian, the second here at The New York Times. If deep globalization means that labor is un-free with regard to collective action (i.e., unions) we end up with the sorts of situaitons reported in the news today. What we need instead is the sort of “sane globalization” that Rodrik recommends, that is political-economic arrangements will allow democratically enacted and systematically enforced restraints on labor markets.

On the utter fatuity of rational man:

Education is a public good. It is best supplied and paid for by the group as a whole, because no individual or small collective can produce the overall social benefit that the nation can provision collectively.
Education doesn’t respond well to market forces because many of the social goods that arise from education—socialization, a grounding in civics, historical context, rational and systematic reasoning—are not goods or services demanded by a market, but rather they are the underlying substrate that allows people to intelligently conduct transactions in a marketplace as well as establishing and maintaining good governance.
There is a long and wide body of evidence that people with wide, solid educational foundations that transcend mere vocational skills produce societies that are more prosperous, more transparent, healthier, more democratic—that attain, in short, all the things we hope markets will attain for us.
… But functional democracies require that all people—not just those who are already wealthy—are given the foundational knowledge that allows them to prosper and participate in the full range of social activities that make nations great.

Hunter, fisherman, shepherd, critic: Karl Marx’s vision of the free individual:

We should now be in a position to answer the charge of hypocrisy with which we began this essay. Is there, in any of the writings of Marx and Engels, any moralising commentary on what individuals living within capitalist society should do with their lives? Do they have anything to say, for example, about what kind of jobs workers should take? What the rich should do with their money? What capitalists should do with their capital? Whether or not it’s acceptable for individuals to set up in business, for workers to join communes? What the state should do about the problems capitalism throws up? Do they tell us what kind of relationships we can enter into and with whom, what kind of food to eat, what it is acceptable to drink? Should socialists renounce all worldly goods and live a monkish existence of poverty, charity, duty, and brotherhood? No. Not a word. The laughter of the scoffers stands revealed as the laughter of fools who cannot distinguish between Marx’s social theory and Christianity.

Running out of excuses:

The latest data on US incomes make for grim reading, both as regards the bottom of the income distribution where the number in (absolute) poverty is at an all-time high (the proportion of the population was the highest since 1993), and in the middle, where median household incomes have fallen back to the 1997 level. For some groups, such as male wage earners without college education, real incomes haven’t risen since around 1970

Having Lots Of People Work For Small Firms Is A Sign Your Economy Is Dysfunctional:

If you’re talking about an economic indicator in which the U.S., U.K., Germany, Finland, and Denmark are at the bottom and Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Hungary are at the top, then you’re looking at an economic indicator in which you want to be at the bottom. The economically more successful countries are less dominated by small firms. That shows us, I think, that the link between entrepreneurship and small businesses is much weaker than is often posited. There’s nothing particularly entrepreneurial about taking over the pharmacy from your father, then finding that the good news is that other pharmacists are legally prohibited from competing with you while the bad news is that you can’t legally compete with other pharmacists. Nor is there anything particularly small about an entrepreneurial business like Google (or, for that matter, CVS). Successful firms start small, but then get big and often put a lot of smaller rivals out of business. The existence of a huge quantity of small business probably implies that you have relatively few very successful firms, not that tons of people started entrepreneurial new businesses.

Inside Amazon’s warehouse:

During summer heat waves, Amazon arranged to have paramedics parked in ambulances outside, ready to treat any workers who dehydrated or suffered other forms of heat stress. Those who couldn’t quickly cool off and return to work were sent home or taken out in stretchers and wheelchairs and transported to area hospitals. And new applicants were ready to begin work at any time.

This makes this paragraph – culled from some web site – sound rather … rather something. Naïve, perhaps:

“We all rememebr great stores that used to have great service, but got cheap and crappy. Wonder where the new top-service store is? It’s Amazon — for everything. It has nothing to do with the price; it’s all about superior service and superior selection.”

That’s that. In no particular order.

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The morning after the night before

So it happened as expected (Danes vote for their first female prime minister) and hoped for. And also to be hoped for, is that our newly elected would have read this:

There was a time, not so long ago, when both critics and defenders of capitalism believed that “another world was possible.” It was generally called “socialism.” While the Right condemned socialism as violating individual rights to private property and unleashing monstrous forms of state oppression and the Left saw socialism as opening up new vistas of social equality, genuine freedom and the development of human potentials, both believed that a fundamental alternative to capitalism was possible.
Most people in the world today, especially in the economically developed regions of the world, no longer believe in this possibility. Capitalism seems to most people part of the natural order of things, and pessimism has replaced the optimism of the will that Gramsci once said was essential if the world was to be transformed.
This book hopes to contribute to rebuilding a sense of possibility for emancipatory social change by investigating the feasibility of radically different kinds of institutions and social relations that could potentially advance the democratic egalitarian goals historically associated with the idea of socialism. In part this investigation will be empirical, examining cases of institutional innovations that embody in one way or another emancipatory alternatives to the dominant forms of social organization. In part it will be more speculative, exploring theoretical proposals that have not yet been implemented but nevertheless are attentive to realistic problems of institutional design and social feasibility. The idea is to provide empirical and theoretical grounding for radical democratic egalitarian visions of an alternative social world.

(Erik Olin Wright: Envisioning Real Utopias)

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