Friday, January 29, 2010

Obama's State of the Union address

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/doubts-grow-over-obamas-stalled-leadership/story-e6frg6so-1225824562140

HOURS after he used his first State of the Union address to criticise Congress for putting politics above the plight of ordinary Americans, President Obama took to the road yesterday to proclaim his new message of job creation.

He travelled to Florida to announce $US8 billion for a new nationwide network of high-speed railways – a project the White House claimed would create tens of thousands of new jobs – after scolding Republicans for thwarting his agenda and imploring Democrats to stiffen their resolve.

The State of the Union address came as Mr Obama seeks to relaunch his stalled presidency. Yet rather than retreat from his ambitious agenda – one that has been soundly rejected by voters – he vowed to pursue it, leaving some Democrats worried that it was a speech of political folly rather than one of Churchillian defiance.

The 71-minute address was consumed by the themes of jobs and the economy, after election defeats in New Jersey, Virginia and Massachusetts demonstrated voter anger at Mr Obama’s focus in the past year on health reform. He vowed to put millions back to work, and struck a far more populist tone, casting himself as a fighter for suffering Americans.

“Jobs must be our number one focus in 2010,” he said. “People are out of work. They are hurting. They need our help.”

Snap polls showed that a majority of voters approved of the speech, but Democratic strategists conceded that only if unemployment drops significantly from its current level of 10 per cent will Mr Obama’s problems ease.

Having expended an enormous amount of time and political goodwill on his still fruitless drive to provide universal healthcare, Mr Obama conceded that there had been setbacks in the past 12 months.

When he first addressed a joint session of Congress after taking office, Mr Obama’s approval rating was 70 per cent and his aides believed that within a year he would have passed historic health reform, financial regulation and energy legislation, shut Guantanamo Bay and reduced unemployment to below 8 per cent.

None of that has occurred and after losing the late Edward Kennedy’s Massachusetts Senate seat last week, Mr Obama faced a Congress and American public far more hostile to his policies and sceptical about his ability to govern effectively. Acknowledging that new reality, Mr Obama laid down the gauntlet to both parties.

He first chided his fellow Democrats, who are bracing themselves for big losses in this November’s midterm congressional elections, and who, because of the Massachusetts defeat, lost their filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, which threatens to thwart his entire domestic agenda.

“I would remind you that we still have the largest majority in decades, and the people expect us to solve problems, not run for the hills,” Mr Obama said, looking down on his own party.

Then to stony-faced Republicans, who have run a remarkably successful obstructionist agenda and spent much of the night sitting on their hands, he declared: “Just saying no to everything may be good short-term politics but it’s not leadership.” Trying to recapture some of the anti-Washington sentiment and populist anger that propelled him into office, he laced the speech with criticism of the city’s political culture and Wall Street greed.

He said that he hated the Government’s bailout of Wall Street banks – although he insisted that it had been necessary. He also conceded: “I campaigned on the promise of change, and I know there are many Americans who aren’t sure if they still believe we can change or that I can deliver it.”

Mr Obama vowed to keep pursuing health reform and energy legislation, but gave no new strategies of how to overcome the political gridlock that has stalled his agenda.

He urged politicians to “take another look” at the health issue, once temperatures had cooled. In his most defiant line of the night, he declared: “We don’t quit. I don’t quit.”

Republicans showed no interest in co-operating. Bob McDonnell, the new Republican Governor of Virginia, summed up the opinions of many voters who are dismayed by the exploding deficit: “The federal Government is trying to do too much.”

The Senate yesterday voted 60 to 40, along party lines, to allow the Government’s borrowing to expand by $US1.9 trillion to $US14.3 trillion. The Government spent a record $US1.4 trillion more than it collected in the last fiscal year, and a similar sized deficit is expected in the current fiscal year which ends on September 30.

John Boehner, the senior Republican in the House, said: “The American people were looking for President Obama to change course tonight, and they got more of the same job-killing policies instead.”

Mr Obama offered little in the way of new policies. He proposed plans to provide small businesses with tax breaks and better access to bank loans. He called for construction of new nuclear power plants and new offshore oil drilling, policies welcomed by Republicans and which could help the President to pass legislation designed to limit carbon emissions.

———-

has it only been one year? felt longer..he seems tight with timmyG :)

401

[Via http://seeker401.wordpress.com]

1/28/2010 - Shelter Spotlight

Hello My Fellow Readers, I Hope You All Have Had A Very Good Week Thus Far. Big Things Going On All Across The Country, President Obama Gave His First State Of The Union Address, ESPN’s Winter X Games Began This Evening, And We Are Five Whole Days Away From Groundhog Day. WooHoo! Better Yet, I’ve Got Another Wonderful Post And This Time It Comes From Idaho Falls, Idaho. The Idaho Falls Community Outreach Center Offers A Hot A Hearty Meal To Anyone In Need And Has Averaged About 14,000 Meals A Year Since 2006. The Soup Kitchen Is Open Monday To Saturday From 12 Noon Until About 1:00PM. The Idaho Falls Community Outreach Center Is Located At 301 South Boulevard, Idaho Falls, Idaho 83401.

“The Community Outreach Center started as a dream shared by several members of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, who worked in the Soup Kitchen in the basement of that same building. We wanted to move the Soup Kitchen to a bigger, more accessible location that just happened to be next door. At about the same time in 2002, the two Episcopal churches were making plans to merge, so it was a perfect time to sell the St. Mark’s building, buy the neighboring MPCU building and give the Soup Kitchen a new home. In 2003 that is exactly what happened. And since there was so much extra room, we invited four other charities to share the space at no charge. With this development, a new Board of Directors was formed to run the newly named Community Outreach Center. A facility dedicated to housing social service charities free of charge, so that they could use their meager funds on their very important missions“. – From Their Website – http://www.ifoutreach.org

[Via http://hatterandbeanz.com]

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Britney Spears And Mary J. Blige

Britney Spears And Mary J. Blige WASHINGTON – SEPTEMBER 3: Singers Britney Spears (R) and Mary J. Blige attend a media conference for the 2003 ‘NFL Kickoff Live from the National Mall’ September 3, 2003 in Washington, DC. Thousands of U.S. military personnel are expected to attend a concert featuring Blige, Spears, Aretha Franklin, Aerosmith and Good Charlotte September 4 in Washington, DC. Image courtesy picapp (not to be copied or used by others) www.denimsquare.com

[Via http://denimsquare.wordpress.com]

1/26/2010 - Shelter Spotlight

Howdy Folks And Happy Tuesday !!! Today Is All About Numbers. It’s Officially Our 50th Post On Hatter & Beanz (insert applause here). Secondly, We’re Getting Numerically Crazy Today. That’s Right We’re Featuring A Shelter That Managed To Fill Over 21,000 Different Volunteer Shifts In 2008, And Nearly 25,000 In 2009. That’s Pretty Darn Good If You Ask Me. Not Only Has This Shelter Put Up Those Numbers, But They’ve Averaged Nearly 12,000 Hot Meals A Year Through Their Soup Kitchen Each Of The Last Five Years. WOW! Anyone Know Who I’m Talking About? The Answer Is The Poverello Center, Inc. Of Missoula, Montana. The Poverello Center, Inc. Serves The Greater Missoula Area And Is Located At 535 Ryman Street In Missoula, MT 59802. They Can Be Reached By Phone By Calling (406) 728-1809.

“The Poverello Center operates transitional housing facilities for homeless families, The Joseph Residence, and for homeless veterans, The Valor House, as well as a daytime, drop-in center for the chronically homeless, The Salcido Center. Clients of all programs represent the homeless, working-poor, disabled, mentally ill, elderly, veterans, families, runaways, children, and folks struggling with substance abuse recovery. Nonviolence, gentle personalism, and the community organizing model are the ideals which inform all actions and decisions at the Pov.  It is understood that all individuals are equally worthy, that no one has a monopoly on the truth, and that we have much to learn from one another. There is a consistent refusal to participate in or condone any act of violence, any act of harm or humiliation, including sexism or racism. All violence is interrupted and attempts are made to resolve conflicts with respect. The Pov recognizes, nurtures, and celebrates community by building relationships through its programs, special events, and outreach.  The Pov continually raises public awareness of homelessness at local, state and national levels through education and advocacy programs designed for policy-makers, community and business leaders, other homeless service organizations, students, news media, and the general public“. – From Their Website – http://www.thepoverellocenter.com

[Via http://hatterandbeanz.com]

Monday, January 25, 2010

Tired of stench, Haitians torch bodies in plaza

NEWS
Tired of stench, Haitians torch bodies in plaza
By Moni Basu, CNN
January 25, 2010 1:40 p.m. EST

turner-cnn

Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) — The scene was horrific, the stench unmistakable. Sadly, it was nothing new here. But because it unfolded so many days after the earthquake that took at least 112,000 lives, it was shocking.

Three bodies trapped in a crushed taxi. A man, two women. Set ablaze.

Even for those who have witnessed so much these past 13 days, the torching of the Toyota in the capital’s central plaza Monday was difficult to take in. It highlighted one of Haiti’s many quandaries: how to dispose of bodies.

The taxi had been smashed by collapsing concrete during the devastating earthquake, and the bodies were decomposing in tropical temperatures, the smell unbearable to the thousands who have temporarily sought shelter under tarpaulins and tents across the street at the Champs de Mars plaza.

The foul smell prompted people to dig the car out of the rubble, but those living on the street in the area said disposal trucks never arrived to take the bodies away.

“They couldn’t find anyone to dispose of the bodies so they had to burn them,” said Gidel Fellmon.

In the days after the January 12 quake, Haitians and rescue and relief crews have struggled to find proper disposal methods for bodies. Thousands of corpses have been pulled from the rubble and burned. Bodies have been bulldozed and dumped into open pits.

Find loved ones in Haiti

At one of the capital city’s cemeteries, people opened up old crypts and shoved corpses into them before resealing them. Workers loaded bodies — piled on the sides of roads — into the basket of a front-loader tractor, which then deposited them into blood-stained dump trucks, according to CNN correspondents.

On Monday, as the taxi burned, people stood stoically around the charred flesh and exposed bones.

Two pairs of shoes lay in the car’s twisted metal.

Interactive map: Where to find aid

© 2009 Cable News Network Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. Share

[Via http://dominicstoughton.wordpress.com]

Kashmiri Pandits seek US govt help in the rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pandits in Panun Kashmir

International Kashmir Federation (IKF) marked the 20th year of the Kashmiri Pandit exodus which began in January 1989 on the U.S. Capitol Hill. IKF met with the State Department officials and members of Congress and Senate on January 20 and January 21 for assistance with the rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pandits. A memorandum was submitted to the Secretary of State which read:
Kashmiri Pandits hail from Kashmir, the northernmost area of India and have been struggling for past two decades as refugees in their own country. “In fact, today marks the day two decades ago, when 350,000 Kashmiri Hindus, called Kashmiri Pandits, were driven away after thousands were murdered and raped.
We call it the Exodus Day for Kashmiri Pandits, which is recognized throughout the world to remember those unfortunate people as well as bring awareness to this issue. Right at the moment, thousands of these uprooted people are living in other parts of India as refugees. In direct violation of the Constitution of India and the United Nations Charter, the Kashmiri politicians have denied the basic human rights to Hindus.
They have also purposely created an atmosphere of uncertainty and insecurity so that like Hindus, Sikhs and secular Muslims of Kashmir region, the Hindus of Jammu and adjoining cities feel extremely unsafe and helpless and are forced to leave their homes and hearths en mass.

The Government of India has not made an effort to rehabilitate the Pandit refugees in their own country. It has been only talking about their return without any consideration for their safety. The only thing the Government must do is to carve out a safe haven for this minority community in Kashmir. This safe haven, also called ‘Panun Kashmir’ meaning ‘My Kashmir’ will allow the Kashmiri Hindus promote their culture in safety.
The first requirement is survival, culture comes later. Kashmiri Pandits want to return to Kashmir because, first, they have lived there for thousands of years; second, because their jobs are there; third, because the backdrop of their ethos is there.
This community is scattered all around India and is very quickly losing its culture and heritage. By carving out this land in the Indian State of Kashmir, the Government of India would be allowing this intellectual and very educated community to live without fear of persecution.
The Government of India needs to address the question of the social, political and economic aspirations of the community, which must be considered as an indispensable component of any future settlement on Kashmir.

“Twenty years have passed and our people are still disenfranchised politically, socially and economically. More than 45,000 people are still in camps. The State Government of Jammu and Kashmir has been busy making false promises while Government of India has been consistent with a policy of appeasement”, said Jeevan Zutshi, the Chairman of International Kashmir Federation, an international body of Kashmiri Pandits fighting for the survival of their community. IKF delegates came from New York, California, Washington, D.C and Florida.
They met with Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Michael Owen on the morning of Thursday January 21st for more than an hour. Maharaj Kaul, IKF delegate from New York started the meeting with the history of ancient Kashmir up to 1947 and Pakistan’s insurgency and indoctrination of the muslim majority community in Kashmir, which otherwise was an example of religious harmony and co-existence.
Deepak Ganju, IKF delegate from Florida and the past President of Kashmiri Overseas Association (KOA) talked about the deplorable state of the Kashmiri pandit refugees in camps in Jammu. Mr. Owens was familiar with the Kashmir Problem but was appalled at the level of adversity faced by Kashmiri Pandits.

Jeevan Zutshi talked about various resolutions and declared that the only solution to the present crisis was to carve out a separate land for Kashmiri Pandits and other nationalistic and peace loving Indians within Kashmir.
“Kashmir is the home to 750,000 Pandits and making an enclave for them within Kashmir will provide a legal territory and they can feel a high level of security so they feel they belong in their ancient land where they have been for thousands of years. This land will be administered by the Central Government of India.”
IKF then had a candid discussion with Congressman Mike Honda who admitted only knowing of the Kashmir Problem through an international Symposium convened by Mr. Zutshi in 2003 and attended by Jim McDermott, Terrista Schaffer, Congressman Pete Stark and various think tanks.
Mr. Honda was very receptive to the plight of Kashmiri Pandits in India and promised his support.
IKF then briefed Republican Congressman Ed Royce, Congressman Frank Pallone, Congressman Jerry McNerney and Senator Sherrod Brown of the Kashmir Problem and the Panun Kashmir movement.
“It was a very successful set of meetings in which the plight of Kashmiri Pandits was front and center. It was also an achievement that they were further educated on the Kashmir Problem and Panun Kashmir solution”, said Jeevan Zutshi.
source:http://newsblaze.com/story/20100124130852zzzz.nb/topstory.html

[Via http://kashmirblogs.wordpress.com]

Friday, January 22, 2010

Climate change chief says sorry for hot air claim over melting glaciers

The head of the UN’s climate change body has been forced to make a humiliating apology over claims the Himalayan glaciers could vanish within 25 years.

Last week it emerged there was no evidence for the warning from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

After a global outcry, Dr Rajendra Pachauri  -  chairman of the IPCC  -  has issued an unprecedented apology.

The alarmist claim appeared two years ago in an influential report. At the time the IPCC insisted the document contained the latest and most detailed evidence yet of the risks of man-made climate change.

Dr Pachauri even dismissed the report’s detractors for using ‘voodoo science’.

But in fact the claim was originally made by scientist Syed Hasnain, from Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi, who has since admitted the comment was ‘pure speculation’.

Dr Pachauri said in a statement: ‘In drafting the paragraph in question, the clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures, were not applied properly.

‘The chair, vice-chairs, and co-chairs of the IPCC regret the poor application of well-established IPCC procedures in this instance.’

The apology is a major blow to the IPCC which was set up to provide political leaders with clear, independent advice on climate change.

www.dailymail.co.uk

[Via http://thedesso123.wordpress.com]

Flickrfan: Shady Pergola

Shady Pergola, flickrfan, usa, ca, california, san diego, architecture, hdr, high dynamic range, photomatix, lucisart, pergola, bej, michaelseljos,photo by Michael in San Diego, California on FlickrFan Stan's site licensed under Creative Commons

Photographed by Michael in San Diego, California

I didn’t know this place existed until just recently. I was walking through the park on a weekend, and there were too many people to do the kind of photography I like to do there, so I wandered around and found this place. I think this location is used for a lot of wedding photography.

This is located at the San Diego Parks & Recreation Headquarters.

– License

[Via http://flickrfanstan.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

USA: Brown wins Mass., Obama’s health care in danger

Brown, in his victory speech, referred to one of the decisive moments of the campaign, when in a debate Coakley referred to "Ted Kennedy’s seat". Brown said: "This Senate seat belongs to no one person, to no political party … This is the people’s seat."

The Guardian continues referring to “Kennedy’s seat” and yet, it’s just one of the “people’s seat” as Mr. Brown righteously said. 

Terrible blow to democrats and leftists in general, not only because of Obama’s policy being in danger, but also because of the idea of democracy these guys have. Note that they consider that a senator’s seat is their property because they have won it for a number of years.

[Via http://teaandpolitics.wordpress.com]

Obama gets bitch-slapped by Massachusetts voters

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article6994679.ece

Republicans scored an historic victory overnight that put President Barack Obama’s agenda in jeopardy exactly a year after he took power – and could kill health-care reform.

A little-known Republican state legislator came from a 30-percentage point deficit to win Edward Kennedy’s old seat in the US Senate in Massachusetts in what appeared to be a massive protest vote against the party that controls both chambers of Congress and the White House.

“This is a huge wake-up call for the Democrats, for the Obama Administration and the country. America is fed up of the arrogance coming from Washington,” said Andy Card, White House chief of staff in the George W. Bush Administration.

Democrats were reeling from the by-election defeat, which deprived them of the 60-seat “super-majority” that allows them to overcome Republican filibusters in the 100-member US Senate.

Scott Brown, a lawyer, military officer and former male model, has promised to use his Senate vote to defeat the Democrats’ health-care reform, which was on the brink of passage after decades of trying.

Democrats pledged to try to ram through health-care reform despite the loss, but they risk a popular backlash if they do so.

Yesterday’s vote was seen as a referendum on Mr Obama’s presidency and his signature initiative, health-care reform.

The Democrat’s defeat was particularly ironic because health-care reform was Senator Kennedy’s life-long passion until his death from brain cancer in August.

Swing voters deserted the Democrats in what party elders had considered the safest of safe seats, and many disillusioned Democrats stayed at home.

With 84 per cent of the precincts counted, Mr Brown had a decisive 52-47 percent lead. Results showed he had performed strongly among independent voters in the Boston suburbs.

“Obama is a smart guy. I don’t have a problem with his foreign policy, but it’s his approach to the economy that worries me. I am a businessman and a free-market guy and I don’t think Obama see it like me,” said Rocco Gianni, a salesman. “I think we need health care reform but I’m concerned about the form the current bill is in.”

The Democrats had held the Massachusetts seat since 1952 with Edward Kennedy succeeding his brother John Fitzgerald Kennedy when he became president.

The state – often considered the most liberal in America with legal gay marriage and its own universal health-care plan – had not elected a Republican to its other US Senate seat since 1972.

The Democratic blame-game began even before the polls closed with party leaders pointing fingers at a lacklustre campaign by Democratic candidate Martha Coakley, the Massachusetts attorney-general.

Ms Coakley, who made her name as a prosecutor pursuing British nanny Louise Woodward in a notorious 1997 Boston baby-shaking case, seemed to assume she would win until late polls showed a surge by her opponent.

Mr Obama and former president Bill Clinton dashed to the state to campaign for Ms Coakley but their efforts failed to turn the rising Republican tide.

The Democrats’ previously formidable get-out-the-vote machine in Massachusetts let them down despite unions manning phone banks to call tens of thousands of voters.

Mr Brown rode around the state in a green pick-up truck with 200,000 miles on the clock to emphasise his populist appeal, portraying the contest as “Me against the machine.”

He defined the race in a TV debate by declaring: “It’s not the Kennedys’ seat, it’s not the Democrats’ seat, it’s the people’s seat.”

———-

losing teddys seat so soon after his death is a huge slap in the face for obama and what he stands for..its a rejection of obama and his health plan..no matter what they say or spin they put on it..this is democrat country..now its given itself to the “enemy”..the new hero of the GOP has been found..

401

[Via http://seeker401.wordpress.com]

Monday, January 18, 2010

barack obama's first year in charge

by Ernie Haberkern
from Berkeley, California

The enormous enthusiasm that the election of the bright, well-spoken, African American woke in the liberal left is fading fast. Of course, much of that enthusiasm was a result of the justified revulsion provoked by the Cheney-Bush presidency and as that bad memory fades liberals are forced to face the current reality.

Nobody should be surprised. Obama was very clear, in his election campaign speeches, that withdrawal from Iraq was a precondition for a dramatic escalation of the war in Afghanistan.

But I must admit that I was surprised when the Obama administration continued the Bush policy of bailing out the banks with no restrictions. Tim Geithner, the Obama administration’s overseer was, for all intents and purposes, an office mate of Hank Paulson, Bush’s appointee.

And the health care reform has become another bailout: this time for the insurance and pharmaceutical companies. They will receive an influx of cash from millions of new customers who will be forced by this legislation to enroll in their plans.

Part of this will be paid for by unionised workers who traded wage increases for company financed health insurance plans. They are now going to be taxed to help pay for the Obama plan. Obama’s education secretary, Arne Duncan has made teacher unions his main target. It is no accident that David Books, a conservative Republican columnist for the New York Times has become a big booster of Obama.

He is, for all practical purposes, the moderate Republican people like Brooks have been looking for. I can’t leave this subject without saying a kind word for Sarah Palin. Her crack about “death panels” was exactly the kind of rhetoric that turns liberals on because it is so outrageous.

But, in fact, the notion that Medicare costs are getting out of control because of expensive treatments in the last few months of life of terminally ill people is a subject that economists, liberal as well as conservative, have been writing about for years. And the current bill, House and Senate versions alike, will institute controls on such treatments.

It is not a problem with a simple solution but it is disingenuous to dismiss the fears of ordinary citizens that government bureaucracy will not necessarily act in their interest.

I think the best place to start in analyzing the Obama phenomenon is to look at the comparison often made with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Here too was a politician without much of a record who, in a moment of crisis, roused the electorate with his rhetoric (demagogy?) and radically changed American politics for good and ill. The question is: why has Obama so signally failed to make any significant change in the political and economic life of the nation?

The answer is that when Roosevelt was elected there was a powerful opposition movement in the country. The socialist and communist parties had a significant following and they were very influential in the massive explosion of trade union unrest exemplified by the newly formed Congress of Industrial Organizations. That opposition forced, and allowed, Roosevelt to take far more radical steps than he would have
been able to had these forces not existed.

There is a story, probably apocryphal like most good stories, of a private meeting between Roosevelt and a leader of the popular movement. In the version I heard the leader was A. Phillip Randolph leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.

According to the story Roosevelt ended the conversation with the remark “I think your proposal is excellent. Now, go out there and make me do it!” Unfortunately, the US of A
is very short on people like A. Phillip Randolph and the movements that created them right now.

[Via http://thecommune.wordpress.com]

I'm on Facebook again

I’ve just done the unthinkable, I joined Facebook … again. My reasons for getting rid of the service last summer are here.

Now I’m simply going to try and use the service more responsibly and as nothing more than a glorified address book.

I’m going to add only people who I’ve met in real life, or people who I contact rather often.

If you don’t fit into either of those categories then please, fuck off.

http://www.facebook.com/DevilsRejection

[Via http://stefanconstantinescu.com]

Friday, January 15, 2010

Art for health's sake - By Christopher Yasiejko, for The Inquirer

Forgive yourself if you enter the five-story Pavilion at Paoli Hospital and mistake it for the skylighted atrium of a grand mall. The centerpiece space of the $145 million facility, which opened in July, radiates the warmth of a coffeehouse. It’s as welcoming to extended families as it is to intimate conversations.

High above people whose thoughts are focused on some of life’s most harrowing curveballs, eight towering chiffon mobiles sway with the circulating air. They range from 6 by 10 feet to 8 by 16 feet, and each displays two vertical, intersecting, archival-ink photographs of natural scenes: oak trees, ginkgo leaves, the colors of autumn-dyed trees reflected in water, pine needles, snow geese against a blue sky.

“You’ll see people just sitting there, staring at them,” says Lindsey Felch.

Felch is the art consultant who led the installation of an expansive collection of photographs and paintings throughout a building whose every angle was designed with patients and visitors in mind.

After cutting 120 works from the pool of art, she chose locations for the 408 remaining pieces. She spent 20 hours strolling through the blueprints, hours more walking the completed halls. Initially allotted $300,000 for the project – the Pavilion, whose mobiles were made by one photographer, had a separate budget – Felch finished with $50,000 to spare.

Such sums are modest considered alongside the premiums some collectors pay for art. And a growing body of research suggests that the resulting vibrancy has marked effects on patients, visitors, and staffers.

According to national surveys in 2004, 2007, and 2008, art in health-care facilities – hospitals, in particular – can reduce the length of hospital stays, need for medication, and number of complications. Coupled with increased staff retention, that means hospitals have more to gain from displayed art than better moods: Thoughtfully selected and exhibited images have measurable economic benefits.

While the therapeutic value of artistic activities is widely accepted, it’s becoming clear that the mere display of paintings, murals, and sculptures (not a new development in hospitals) can have a similar effect on recovery.

 

Reaching more people

“Think about how you feel in a certain environment,” says Anita Boles, executive director of the Society for the Arts in Healthcare, a Washington nonprofit that helped conduct the surveys with Americans for the Arts and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. “Think about what makes you feel better, and what makes you feel less than better.”

When Boles joined the society nearly three years ago, her father, a retired physician, said, “Congratulations. Now tell me in 30 seconds or less: What is arts in health care?”

“Good question,” she replied. She called the members of the board and asked them to share their thoughts.

“I got 23 different explanations of what the field was. So we really recognize that in order to be able to talk outside of the field to other individuals, we have to have a strong definition of what arts in health care actually is, and why it’s so important.”

In the organization’s 2004 study of how literary, performing, and visual arts and design figure in health-care programs, nearly half the 2,333 responding institutions had some sort of arts program, more than 70 percent of those in the form of permanent displays.

The supplementary 2007 study supported the findings and showed that the number of paid arts administrators had increased, as had the number of organizations funding programs from their operating budgets. It also found that diverse populations – Latino, African American, and white populations were the largest – benefited in nearly equal proportions.

Seeking more data

A 2009 report on developments in the arts-in-health-care field acknowledges that much early research is “anecdote rich and data poor,” particularly in assessing economic benefits, the subject of the 2008 survey.

The report cites Bill Ivey, former head of the National Endowment for the Arts and now director of Vanderbilt University’s Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy, who called for more investment in cost-benefit analysis to support saving “potentially billions of dollars annually” through arts programs.

Though there may be a shortage of hard numbers, examples of the effects of health care’s changing face are getting easier to find.

At the Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine, the University of Pennsylvania Health System’s 500,000-square-foot outpatient-care facility on the former site of the Civic Center in University City, the glass-encased atrium soars more than six stories. Even on cloudy days, light cascades through the ceiling and walls.

Completed in 2008 and fully functional early last year, the Perelman in mid-September opened “Interplay,” the first in a series of exhibitions designed to lend the atrium a subtle idea or atmosphere.

Marsha Moss, curator of “Interplay” in conjunction with the presenting Arts and Business Council of Greater Philadelphia, chose nine abstract sculptures by nine regional artists. She wanted to bring art to people who otherwise might not be exposed to it, and her choices carry “an undercurrent theme of rejuvenation, rebirth, something that would suggest that sense of hope.”

Moss recalls sitting on a sofa beneath the suspended Orange Crush, by Warren Muller, to the right of the atrium entrance. A tangle of orange utilitarian objects – push brooms, clamps, a bicycle wheel, pointed lightbulbs – it’s an enigma.

“You could sit there, as I did,” Moss says, “and be invisible.”

She eavesdropped as visitors discussed whether it even was art. People’s reactions to the sculptures – three hang from the ceiling on the first level, and six stand on the mezzanine above the escalators – don’t matter to her as much as the fact that people react.

Opening more eyes

Libby Harwitz, a longtime Center City resident who spent most of three days visiting a close friend, says she felt “a flush of beauty coming inside of me” each time she walked in.

She was an administrator in another local hospital for 13 years, and her husband is a physician. “He went out of his mind,” Harwitz says, “because it’s nothing he’s ever seen before.”

“I think the power of art in general, whether a person is well or ill or whatever – it’s a distraction and a privilege to be able to be a part of it,” she says. “People who go in there are overwhelmed, are frightened, are unknowing as to what their own situation is going to be. But here you are, experiencing this kind of elegance and beauty.”

Laurence Salzmann, a photographer and filmmaker, was there to see a doctor on the day of the exhibition’s opening reception. He knows several of the artists, and Moss invited him to join them that night.

“As an artist, I’m always interested in what art is hung in hospitals,” he says, adding that “Interplay” includes works he calls “challenging,” “high-end,” and “inspiring.”

Virtua Memorial Hospital in Mount Holly has showcased art for more than 20 years. David Flinker, who was chief of hematology and oncology, firmly believed that art was important in healing. He invited local artists to exhibit and offer their work for sale, producing eight to 10 shows a year.

Virtua’s Pavilion Art Gallery now bears his name. “In our hospital,” says Stephen Kolesk, the hospital’s vice president and chief operating officer, “Flinker was well ahead of his time.”

Notions of what constitutes health care, Kolesk says, have changed. While medication and quality of care still are integral, “healing is more than that, and I think hospitals and health systems are starting to realize there’s all the other things [about which] 25 years ago we might have said, ‘That’s not really going to help,’ [but now] we realize do help. People do get better faster because of things like art therapy or art that allows them to reflect about what’s going on.”

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis keeps three to five artists busy all the time, says John Curran, director of design and construction. Its biomedical communications department has staff photographers who provide images at no extra cost.

Curran leads all renovations, and for nine years has managed the art program. The campus has 60,000 to 80,000 square feet of murals and at least 5,000 square feet of art and photography, age-specific for sections of the hospital designated for toddlers, tweens, and teenagers.

“I really believe that human beings for 5,000 years, 10,000 years, have brought art to their construction, and I think that’s important,” Curran says. “You can’t just color walls and call it art. You have to bring art and artists, and then interpretation.

“Just about any program we do has an art budget in it. What we find is it really makes a hospital a lot less threatening when you come in the door. If you see a white wall in a hospital, it’s not something that kids are used to. But you come in and you see art and painted walls, and the first impression is a lot more welcoming.”

He and a team of artists and administrators discuss themes and scaled drawings of potential murals. Sophistication matters – toddlers are more likely to see low-lying paintings of cartoonish animals, while teens are more open to conceptual work – and so does style. Hallway art must be softer, to avoid hallucinations among anesthetized patients. Intensive-care units house impressionistic works – pleasing, but not detailed, images of forests, for example.

The hospital allots $150,000 annually for murals. If an interior-design team, Curran says, looks holistically at art availability throughout a facility during planning, “it can be done on a shoestring budget. It doesn’t have to be expensive if you’re doing some of the work yourself and it comes from your soul.”

But even as the creation of healing gardens, exposure to bountiful natural light, and musical performances grows, exhibitions of visual art can face stigmatization.

“It scares people around the country, frankly,” Curran says of hospital administrators. “Often, art is picked by the architect committee. And what we really felt from the beginning is it needs to be organic to your organization. It needs to be your soul.”

[Via http://artsandhealth.wordpress.com]

01/14/10 Photo of the day - Speeding winter highway

Speeding winter highway

Speeding winter highway

On the road again. I’m starting today a 3 weeks trek across eastern USA in search of cool sights for new photos, stock and have a good time. This trip will take me trough New York state, Pennsylvania, Virginia, The Carolinas, Georgia and Florida. From Montreal to key west and back. It should make for a very interesting new series of shots. And it’s just so cool to get out of the studio for awhile.

The photo of the day was shot right before I crossed over into the USA at the thousand islands. It is shot using my zoom and a very slow shutter speed.

Travel tip: If you see a Nexus line at the border and haven’t got a Nexus card, do not go in it by mistake. You’ll be taken in and will have to wait through some paperwork.

We stopped quickly at Watertown, Ny for dinner at a heavily advertised restaurant (seemingly a local chain) called Cracker Barrel. The food was all American country food, including (gasp) fried steak with mac n cheese and mashed potatoes sides. Yup, we’ve passed the border. Nearly everyone in the room was 40-80 pounds overweight. And I guess the speaks for itself. Yummy, fat, sweet, overflowing portions. I had the Reuben’s platter, with a great sandwich with a strongly pleasant caraway taste and a not-too-sweet apple dumpling for dessert. I must say both were delicious, and the decor was definitely classic country American with fishing and hunting trophies all over. A great way to start the trip.

First night in Syracuse. Downtown hotel was $189 a room, so we drove west for 15 minutes and got a great room for $79 with complimentary wifi. Sweet.

[Via http://mccomberphoto.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Helping Haiti

My church has a sister parish in Barederes (sic?). We’ve been partnered for years, sending people, money, and supplies to help the parish and their (excellent) school. We pray for them, and they pray for us, and once a year, their priest visits to give us updates on what’s happening. In September, we ship hundreds of boxes of school supplies for the children, to help them in their studies. In January, groups from our church visit there– doctors and mechanics and engineers and nurses, and help the parish and village out in any way they can.

I don’t know if the folks from my church were there or not. In a way, it doesn’t matter. Our sister parish were the first people I thought of when I heard the first reports of the earthquake last night. I know they were hurt by the hurricaines a year ago, and Haiti is so small that the whole country must be groaning right now, including my brothers and sisters in Baraderes.

With that in mind, I have to add my small, paltry voice to those imploring aid. I will be digging deep to find something to send along, and I beg any stoppers-by to consider what they can give as well. Even the smallest amount is something– If you only have a dollar, try to give that dollar. It’s the little things that add up and make the difference. I know it’s hard, right now– we have a lot less to give, these days, and things aren’t looking good for the near future. But sometimes, our economic troubles seem petty when you see images of an entire country brought literally to its knees in only a matter of minutes. We may yet end up in such a state ourselves, but until we are there, I think wemust, as in all things, do what we can, as we can.

So, since others have done far better work in list making and writing, I’m just going to send you along to those wonderful people.

First, the Anchoress has a list of places you can assist.

then

Michelle Malkin has information as well.

I’ll update as I find more, but these two ladies have done a great job.

[Via http://americanslytherin.wordpress.com]

Buena cita de Pasolini por Elvira Lindo

Bismilah al rahmán y rahim

No siempre me gusta el tono de Elvira Lindo, que tuvo sus momentos graciosos algún verano, peo la mayoría la veces se pasó de pesada experta en catetismos y rozó con demasiada frecuencia el derechismo crónico, pero también es cierto que tiene cultura y buenos gustos de lectura. Hoy nos ha regalado en la playa final de El País, por cierto, encima de una crónica interesante sobre una joven refusenik israelí, una extensa cita maravillosa del genial poeta italiano (“Telebiquini“):

En definitiva, hemos asumido que el medio es un espejo de lo que somos. Neorrealismo televisivo. En estos días, leo una recopilación de artículos de Pasolini, Escritos corsarios.Su furiosa defensa de la verdadera cultura popular le hacía estar en guerra permanente con la cultura de masas: “El fascismo, lo digo una vez más -escribía en 1973-, fue incapaz de arañar siquiera el alma del pueblo italiano; el nuevo fascismo, a través de los medios de comunicación e información (sobre todo, justamente, la televisión), no sólo la ha arañado, sino que la ha lacerado, la ha violado, la ha afeado para siempre…”. Murió en el año 1975. Visto lo visto, el afeamiento de la realidad no ha encontrado aún su límite.

A mi me suena a gloria, y me alegro de que Elvira Lindo vuelva a ser una voz picante. Así mejoraremos todos. Un acierto para la cabecera, y una buena noticia que anuncia quizás un giro en la órbita del mundo UPyD menos fanático.

[Via http://abenyusuf.wordpress.com]

Monday, January 11, 2010

Has James Cameron ever been camping?

So, I went with the Roommie to see Avatar over the weekend. The visuals were stunning, beautiful, gorgeous. . .all that. The actors gave it their best, I think, considering the script given and the direction from their director. The main characters (Jake and Grace) were interesting enough to draw the audience in to their stories. It could have been an amazing, truly awesome and great film.

Sadly, that very sentiment haunted my viewing as I watched, all the places where I thought “Jeeze, this coulda been so good if they’d not been morons.”

And, of course, if the entire movie hadn’t been cribbed from better classics: Dances with Wolves, Dune, Cameron’s own The Abyss, and even some things from Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series.

So, a few questions regardnig Mr. Cameron and this movie:

1) Has James cameron actually ever, you know, met a Marine? Or hell, any member of our Armed Forces? Has he spoken to them, ever with the intent to truly understand them? The fact is, this isn’t the first time he’s (lazily) gone with the “Marines are all dangerous nutcases on the verge of killing everyone and everything” theme in a movie. The aforementioned Abyss is what comes to mind first. In fact, much of Avatar is a revisiting of themes from The Abyss: Glow-in-the-dark aliens, Sigorney Weaver, humans are stupid and evil and aliens are glowy and enlightened, and of course, TEH Military is SCARYYYY!!!!! Oh Noes!

Of course, the retarded, super insulting,  Military-is-Bad-Bad theme has been addressed by others with far better writing, so I’ll let them elaborate here.

The local commander of the operation, especially, came across as a caricature of what Cameron thinks military brass are like. Yeah, they talk crap, they talk tough, they get in your face and keep rigid dicipline. . . discipline far tighter than I saw with that bunch of mercs. And, most military leaders would come up with far better ideas for doing their job than what that guy, whatshisface, came up with. You know what, Gregg Easterbrook covered a lot of these points, so go here and scroll down about 3/5ths of the way. . .

2) Has James Cameron ever been camping? As a corollary, has he ever been to the jungle? I ask because Pandora is so very, very clean. Only Jake ever gets muddy (and only the once). We only see one insect (a lovely, glowing helicopter bug). Everything is shiney and glowy and clean. . . which doesn’t match my experience camping. Much less that time camping in the jungle. Where are the rest of the space-bugs? The cosmic, glowy spiders and beetles? Where are the glowy swarms of starry Botlas flies that get through the netting and feast on your legs with their anti-coagulant saliva? A commenter over at HotAir notes quite correctly that:

But I really agree with those who say it’s a dream of Eden, and by extension, of heaven.Those who get depressed when they see Avatar because Pandora isn’t real must be very far from God, and long to be with Him. (benthere5516 on January 11, 2010 at 12:48 PM)

Pandora is perfect. All the people and animals talk to each other, the people and the plants talk to each other, and everything is perfectly balanced. It never rains on Pandora, and the nights are never dark– the plants and critters glow so much I’d wager they’ve got really bad light pollution, and thus never get to see the beauty of the stars, if they even bother to look up. It’s perfect, and I can’t help but sort of pity those who would live there. . . Because yes, as Heaven, Pandora would be great. But as Life, as a place to learn and grow? Pandora would become Hell if I wanted to grow, to evolve. . . because it’s impossible on Pandora to ever be anything other than what you are.

See, Eywa, the Goddess of the Na’vi and the sentience of the entire moon, keeps the balance of life. But anyone who believes in anything other than straight-up Creationism knows that “the balance of life” never existed on Earth. Evolution and, specifically, Natural Selection, run off imbalance–> one species gaining an advantage with prompts other species to adapt, which in turn prompts other species. . . etc. . .

In addition, the Na’vi are completely spoiled by Eywa. Everything they want is given them. Food and water are plentiful. Locomotion by steed is easy, thanks to the handy neural link that every living being on the moon has. So the “horses” give them rides over the ground. If they want to fly, there are “dragons” to catch and bond with that then fly. All the ancestors store their memories in the Soul Trees (Glowy, white willows not half as cool as Grandmother Willow in Disney’s Pocahantas). There is nothing for the Na’vi to do– no illness to cure, no troubles to overcome. Everything is perfect, clean and balanced, and therefore. . . stagnant. Eywa has coddled her one sentient (and remarkably human) species. She has given them everything, so there is no need for imagination, ingenuity, growth. . .

You know, I had a flash last night as I tried to get to sleep, of Gaia and Eywa meeting one day, and Gaia pounding the crap out of Eywa. Eywa would be seen as a tall, willowy sprite that glows and dances and talks to the trees like a valley girl. Gaia would be shorter, stouter, and would speak in a think Russian accent.

“Like, Oh my God, Gaia, your kids are like, unrefined!” Would say Eywa. ”They don’t glow or anything!”

“Da,” Gaia would reply. “My sons are smart like fox, like wolf, and strong like ox. I make them strong! They try to grow oranges in Florida, I freeze the trees. They build city near water, I crush with great storm! They become strong to survive what I give them. They dream so they can grow, become better all the time! I send swarms of mosquitos so they make medicine! Clever they are! Some think they might hurt me, but I am Big Girl! What can they do to me, compared to what I do to them all the time! Ha!

“My sons need no dragons to fly, for they have learned to fly without wings! My daughters do not need glowing trees and skin– they build their own lights! My children do not need carbon re-inforced bones, because I have made them strong!”

Avatar is full of people being judgemental– the Na’vi, specifically, assume that Jake’s attitude toward wilderness survival is a symptom of insanity. Rather, I see it as the sign of coming from a much harsher world. A world where it rains, where the sun scorches, where tiny bugs eat you alive, where the weather is always changing, always in flux, from one extreme to another. If the Na’vi were placed into the pristine, Earthern wilderness (say, a raw Cantral America Jungle), trained in the edible foods of the area, I suspect they’d quickly die, sometimes in quite prolonged, painful ways. Because they wouldn’t be able to “bond” with anything.  They wouldn’t be any better in those environments because the Na’vi have had it easy. Even with the Big Dragon, even with the black, shiney wolves. . . the day to day miseries of gnats, mosquitoes, temperature flux, disease, poisonous fruits, parasite infected water (even in the pristine places!). . . what would a Na’vi think to encounter such an environment, so much more hostile than that they’d known?

If Gaia, Mother Nature, has any sentience at all, I’d say she’s the Original Tough Momma. As a committed Catholic, I don’t tend to think of things this way but, if I regress to my more pagany past I can think along these lines easy. Mom Nature is red in tooth and claw, capricious and often cruel. But, if one believed in Gaia, one might say she showed us tough love. Her capriciousness and cruelty are what prompted humans to migrate out of Africa, to wander Eurasia and over to the Americas. To learn agriculture, engineering, all the sciences that make us different from all the other animals on this planet. We found our own lights, crafted our own wings, looked up to the stars and said “Wow, got to check that out!”

A human has the dignity, then, of overcoming obstacles. Of bettering and evolving, of deciding to change self for the better, of changing the environment for the sake of its children. A human, flawed and dirty, can grow and evolve. A Na’vi will only ever be a Na’vi, a blue, glowy space monkey that lives in a tree and never dreams of anything different.

[Via http://americanslytherin.wordpress.com]

Good Fences Make Good Neighbours

Israel has decided to build a fences, another wall, along parts of its border with Egypt. Personally I am wondering if the people planning to build the USA/Mexico fence decided to test out the idea down there first, or perhaps they had the handymen ready and decided they might as well put them to work while waiting to hear back from the US on their estimates. Just look at it this way will you: They both wish to build a fence along their southern-ish border; Israel even went as far as to proclaim they were building the fence to ensure the security of the Jewish People and the safe guarding of democracy (BBC) – ok so the US would say Christian People instead of Jewish People, but it sounds familiar none the less, does it not? Either way I wish them luck, for as experience has taught us – from China to Berlin – good fences make good neighbors.

Closer to home the pre-amble to the elections are slowly winding up, Prime Minister Brown, the aptly named stain that he is, firmly believes that labour can beat the conservatives (BBC) even after the recent attempt to depose him and have him driven through the streets, flogged by the populous, until he ran into the sea and started to swim. Meanwhile Clegg, feeling left out and lonely in his corner of the sandbox, comes out and flies in the face of conventional wisdom, pledging to cut the Lib Dem program down to brass tacks. He says it is all to contrast with the other parties ’shopping lists’ of promises made before every election. Yes Clegg, because we are sure no one will feel miffed about the lapse in the long held Lib Dem promises of elderly and child care. I am sorry, no joke there, wish I could come up with one. For cheap comedy, see previous paragraph.

Lets see what happens next,

- Argon B.

[Via http://argonviews.wordpress.com]

Friday, January 8, 2010

Dealing With Limited Colors in 3d Modeling.

3D Industrial Modeling, 3d Engineering Modeling & Animation for Industrial Plants, Chemical Plants, Manufacturing Plants, 3D Engineering modeling India.

We have significant experience in the 3d Industrial design and development of 3D Engineering models to depict your industrial plant based on specifications set by your blue print.

With our in-depth experience, ability and resources, we provide you the complete 3d structural design and detailing services to ensure a seamless visual impression of your plant.

I also have experience in 3d Industrial design modeling and 3d Industrial animation. I specialize in lighting design, particularly aspects which utilize realism to make models readable as objects.

Opinions abound on the subject of how to create a real-time environment by using 256 colors. Many people favor starting with a limited palette (pre-picking the colors that will be used) and making all Texture maps from those colors.

Others believe that better results derive from creating the maps with the full 16.7 million colors available, and then using another program to evaluate the Texture maps and remap them into the 256 most-used colors. Generally, however, when you create texture maps with 16.7 million colors, you do not use them all (or even a significant percentage of them).

To achieve a happy medium between the two previously mentioned methods, first decide on a general scheme (based on the scene, time of day, mood, and so on), and then paint in 24-bit color, focusing on the selected color scheme.

This method also provides a better distillation to 256 colors when you create the final game palette, while still keeping the scene focused toward the visual goals identified with the color scheme. If you do not have access to a program capable of distilling a 256-color palette from multiple images (and remapping the colors in those images to the new palette), your best choice is to start with a predetermined 8-bit palette.

Limited Map Size All gaming platforms today use small texture maps, ranging from 16 pixels to 128. Although this may be intimidating for those whose smallest maps are 320×240 pixels (one-quarter the size of the average monitor display at low resolution), after a bit of practice you will discover how much detail you can achieve in a very small area. You may even find that texture mapping with small maps opens new techniques for creating larger maps when you’re creating pre-rendered 3D images.

A great temptation is to create a Texture map at a high resolution and then scale it down to the parameters of whatever real-time engine you are working with. This seldom works well. Scaling, in most paint programs, is done by a mathematical elimination of pixels based on the percentage of down scaling.

When you reach real-time limits, where every pixel counts, this process can make quite a mess of an originally great texture map-filling it with scattered, color-cycling pixels and making an otherwise smooth map look rocky or rough. Your best bet for making certain that the exact detail you want (and nothing else) appears onscreen during game-play is to start with the same size texture map that will be in the game.

This technique leaves no room for extraneous information and enables you to be very precise as to what amounts of detail go where. And, you can use multiple maps (or a large map carved into real-time sizes) on an object, with very little impact on the speed of the game.

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ReasonTV: We're the TSA and You Can Count on Us! [Video]

We’re the Transportation Security Administration. We’re working hard to make sure you enjoy a safe flight. And while we cannot apprehend every terrorist, you can count on us to do what we’re trained to do whenever there’s a security breach–overreact to tiny threats.

Overreact to tiny threats; ignore the big ones. That’s what we do, and we do it better than anyone.

via ReasonTV

[Via http://scottnolansmith.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

3D Product Modeling, 3D Product Rendering, 3d Animation Design with Outsourcing Company India.

Yantram 3D Product Modeling can create 3d Product Modeling Animation that will effectively showcase your product’s function, storage and packaging. 3D product modeling is a practical technology used by a number of industries – movie industry for producing visual effects; engineering industry for 3D rendering of new devices, Render building plans or 3D Designs of vehicle entertainment industry for creating video and computer games; and medical industry for a detailed presentation of organs.

3d Product Modeling

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[Via http://3darchitecturaldesign.wordpress.com]

10 Top Tips for 2010 - Volume I

Like musical tapas we are going to break these up into several tasty posts for your listening pleasure.

By pure coincidence the first two happen to hail from Manchester in the Northwest of England, consistently a breeding ground for the best in British music (I will return to this phenomenon in a later post).

1. Everything Everything – I’ll let them speak for themselves, except to say that the lead singer reminds me a little bit of a young Forrest Griffin (the UFC fighter)

2. Hurts

Firm believers in less is more, their myspace page is black and white with just the one song, but what a song. Not only do I want to listen to their music; I want to dress like them, I want to style my hair like them and I want to get an earring, I’ve got it bad.

enjoy!

[Via http://thecockandrabbit.wordpress.com]

Monday, January 4, 2010

2010: Welcome to Orwell’s World


John Pilger Accepts Sydney Peace Prize 2009

By John Pilger. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell described a superstate called Oceania, whose language of war inverted lies that “passed into history and became truth. ‘Who controls the past,’ ran the Party slogan, ‘controls the future; who controls the present controls the past.’”

Barack Obama is the leader of a contemporary Oceania. In two speeches at the close of the decade, the Nobel Peace Prize winner affirmed that peace was no longer peace, but rather a permanent war that “extends well beyond Afghanistan and Pakistan” to “disorderly regions and diffuse enemies.” He called this “global security” and invited our gratitude. To the people of Afghanistan, which America has invaded and occupied, he said wittily: “We have no interest in occupying your country.” > more.
foto:SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – NOVEMBER 04: Journalist and human rights activist John Pilger accepts the Sydney Peace Prize 2009 at the University of Sydney on November 4, 2009 in Sydney, Australia. picapp.com

[Via http://theolounges.wordpress.com]

MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS

Meet Me in St. Louis
d. Vincente Minnelli / USA / 1944 / 113 mins
Viewed at: A3.03 @ UEA (Norwich, UK)

I had intended to write a piece here about the obsession with death and mortality displayed by the two younger Smith siblings – Tootie and Agnes – but I decided against it.

I thought, instead, that since a bunch of us had to sit through this clip five times during class, the rest of you out there can do it too…

Tootie…Tootie! Toooootie!

I want five hundred words on my desk by Monday.

[Via http://screenaddict.wordpress.com]

Friday, January 1, 2010

Ultimate reality of Philosophy

“An individual respective very location is the present and the rest all the locations are of the deep of the past”

In this way; Ultimate reality of Philosophy is wonder of creation: Such as: No body shall be able to find out trace of present or future of any body and all shall take the idea about the matters of the past of all. Creator doesn’t know our present movement if her goal is another place of space yet big bang is omnivorous. Our universe is very early such at this events or moment, we are looking everything has creation yet same event or very moment, from the borders on the spiritual is nothing creation in the universe through that early or unopened or contracted. Big bang, evolution, gravitational world’s, time dimension or history of the universe or case or series of events or the structure of sketch of universe is the result from one site only such as own or from your location. From your location; you are a middle point in the universe and from my location; my brain is centre of the universe. Both places are same i.e. dark energy and big bang is on our home planet. Reflected power of brain is the result of present Universe or space-time and physics is the result in your life-time i.e. lifeless position is in the dark energy and on this place. We are looking huge universe yet that the case is between minimal. So on***

[Via http://shahidurrahmansikder.wordpress.com]

Preview: Day 2 of V Magazine's Size Issue

Tara Lynn by Sølve Sundsbø*

Last week, I showed you the preview of Crystal Renn’s editorial of V Magazine’s upcoming Size Issue. V Magazine are obviously trying to generate a lot of buzz, as Models.com have released yet another preview from the issue: Day 2: Curves Ahead by Sølve Sundsbø. (For the complete editorial and full size images, head to Models.com. All images are copyright V Magazine and respective photographers.)

As the name suggests, this editorial places much more emphasis on the curvy body. In my opinion, the fashion is secondary to the thighs, hips and rolls on display.

Candice Huffine by Sølve Sundsbø

While I am completely in love with the Day 1 editorial, I have a lot less love for this shoot. When a magazine like V attempts to display larger bodies as artworks in and of themselves, it always appears as though they are fighting their fashion instincts.

We all know that fashion magazines photoshop. A lot. Freckles, cellulite, shadows, uneven skin tone – anything that is perceived to be a flaw is mercilessly eliminated. However, in this shoot fat rolls, normally an obvious flaw to be removed, must be kept as a feature of the editorial.

So how does a photography team accept the inclusion of fat rolls and present a flawless fashion spread? By doing a really bad job on photoshop.

Candice Huffine and Tara Lynn by Sølve Sundsbø

I mean, look at that. That picture is ridiculous. Candice Huffine has a beautiful roll on her back, yet her back does not bulge in any way. Tara Lynn has some adorable belly chub, yet her stomach stops exactly at the waistband and there is no overhang. Fat doesn’t sit so conveniently in real life.

This editorial is trying so hard to present the ‘real’ body and yet the finished product looks disappointly fake.

*As an aside, that first image of Tara Lynn looks an awful lot like a number of fat softcore pictures I’ve seen. For example, this picture of erotic model that I featured on Hey, Fat Chick. I don’t know if it was deliberate but it sure is interesting…

[Via http://corpulent.wordpress.com]