Monday, March 30, 2009

Trust Circles


Who is in your trust circle? Have they earned that place in the center of your life? What about you? Are you worthy of taking that central and honored place in another person's circle? How trustworthy are the connections we make in an era when we count as "friends" people we've never actually met?

Christopher Allen has written an article dealing with the topographical
map of human interaction. In this article he uses terms that eco-feminists and those in earthwise traditions will recognize: Support Circle, Sympathy Circle, Trust Circle, Emotional Circle and one that may be new: the Familiar Stranger. If you are:

* Pondering the ways in which your life overlaps, intersects and connects with the lives of the people around you, or
* You are choosing who to work with on a project, ritual or event or
* You
wondering who you can count on in a crisis,

you might find this useful.



Sia

Art: Morgan Weistling’s painting The Quilting Bee, 19th Century Americana

Related Articles:

Bitching Is Not Optional

Only the Lonely

The Trouble With Twitter (humor)

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Earth Hour


What would happen if the lights went off all over the world?

Major cities and global landmarks have been plunged into darkness as millions of people switched off lights for an hour to protest against climate change.

The initiative, Earth Hour, was begun in Sydney two years ago by green campaigners keen to cut energy use.

Correspondents say the aim is to create a huge wave of public pressure to influence a meeting in Copenhagen later this year to seek a new climate treaty.
Earth Hour is sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund. The Washington Post reports that "Eighty-four countries pitched in, including tourist icons such as the Eiffel Tower, the Sydney Opera House, Times Square, the Pyramids, Beijing's National Stadium and the Las Vegas Strip."

You can see a video from the BBC at the link above.

Visit Earthhour.org for pictures from around the world and more information.

Well done.

Sia

Related Articles:

Cities Switch Off for Environment

Google Goes Black

Earth Hour in China

Earth Hour gets traction in U.S.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Animals and People Threatened by Floodwaters in Dakota & Minnesota



My thoughts today are with the people and animals facing flood waters in North Dakota and Minnesota. The video I've linked to above (and posted at the blog) from the Rachael Maddow Show is an excellent reminder of what good people can do when they come together.

* Pet Owners: The Humane Society in Fargo has set up Emergency Animal Shelters.

* United Animal Nations has notes on including pets in evacuation plans.

Note to us Westerners: They are doing this work in the worst kind of weather, working with a river filled with not just water, but ice. Watch the video. It really is inspiring.

Update 3/28/09 - Missed It By That Much
Forecast Lifts Hopes of People in Red River Valley

Sia

Related Articles:

National Public Radio has some of the best, up-to-date coverage on the ground

Heartbreaking Triage as Fargo Battles Floods

River Reaches Record High in Fargo

Give 1 million dollars each to workers over 50 (HUMOR)


Well. Here's an idea:

Give $1 million to workers over 50

Patriotic retirement: There are about 40 million people over 50 in the workforce. Pay them $1 million apiece severance pay with these stipulations:

1) They leave their jobs. Forty million job openings — unemployment fixed.

2) They buy new American cars. Forty million cars ordered — auto industry fixed.

3) They either buy a house or pay off their mortgage — housing crisis fixed.

- George H. Martin, Pacifica, CA (Opinion Section, San Jose Mercury News)

That's tax free, right? Thank you, Mr. Martin. Let's hope the President calls. (1)

Sia
Who stopped looking at her 401K a long time ago.

P.S. Can we make it $2 million? Because you've just made me spend a good deal of it, and my generation is going to live up into our 90's.

My thanks to gardengal for sending this to me.

(1) Humor Update 3/29 - Some folks didn't get the irony here, so I'm making it clear: See Cost of War.com and this story on the cost of the Financial Bailout to see what arrogance, stupidity and greed have cost us thus far.

Yet people still want the government to magically fix things, and they want our President to do that all at once, but they don't want to have to sacrifice themselves to make that happen.

As the rude (anonymous) person says in the comments below, do the math.

40 million people x 1 million = ?

Thursday, March 26, 2009

In Memorium: John Hope Franklin


Another good man gone.

I am happy that he lived long enough to see the inauguration of President Obama.

(Update 11:52) Scott Simon of NPR posted a personal remembrance. You can read it here.

From the A.P.:

John Hope Franklin, a towering scholar and pioneer of African-American studies who wrote the seminal text on the black experience in the U.S. and worked on the landmark Supreme Court case that outlawed public school segregation, died Wednesday. He was 94.

David Jarmul, a spokesman at Duke University, where Franklin taught for a decade and was professor emeritus of history, said he died of congestive heart failure at the school's hospital in Durham.

Born and raised in an all-black community in Oklahoma where he was often subjected to humiliating racism, Franklin was later instrumental in bringing down the legal and historical validations of such a world.

As an author, his book "From Slavery to Freedom" was a landmark integration of black history into American history that remains relevant more than 60 years after being published. As a scholar, his research helped Thurgood Marshall and his team at the NAACP win Brown v. Board of Education, the 1954 case that barred the doctrine of "separate but equal" in the nation's public schools.

If you'd like to learn more, I recommend visiting this memorial page from Duke University: John Hope Franklin

Sir, I wish I'd met you.

Sia


Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Geek Fun: Colbert, NASA, Marvin the Martian and the ending of Glactica

Geek Fun:

It's Wednesday, so let's have some fun.


Battlestar Galactica's final episode left one crucial question unanswered, and it's got the two vampires with souls all worked up, in this clip from Angel: Angel and Spike Debate the Ending of Battlestar Glactica
* Spoiler Alert *

My own personal Pagan, Eco-Feminist, Geek note on the ending of Glactica:

OK, writers, here is where you got it really wrong: No woman on that ship would agree to leave the tech behind. Ever. We want our birth control, if not our weapons (I want my weapons), along with our houses, our heating, our tools, our medical advances, and, ahem, our equality, thank you very much. I want this for myself and my kids and their kids to come.

By putting the survivors on our earth and setting them among early man (weak!) you ruined the entire redemption theme. All I could think of, as a woman/Pagan/viewer was, "Oh, great. Thanks, Starbuck! We all know how that turned out: wars, oppression, genocide, persecution, extinctions of whole species, book burnings, and the desecration of Mama Gaia and for what? So two "angel-like" beings can walk through downtown Manhattan at the end, noting how we've come full circle, all the way back to technology, which may yet kill us because our hearts have yet to catch up with our brains. Awesome.

...and don't get me started on the mythology.

Piffle. Shear piffle. You people owe me.

(Update 3/27) The 7 Deadly Sins of Religion In SciFi


Now this is good writing: Hare-Way to the stars.




Will Stephen get his space module? or You don't have to be a rocket scientist:

Meanwhile, NASA has announced a solution to the naming vote; one which had occurred to a great many of us: NASA might name toilet for Stephen Colbert.

Don't look at me, I voted for "Serenity".

... and speak of Josh Whedon, did you catch the last episode of Dollhouse? It seems that the show has finally hit it's stride. For the first time, it felt like something Josh had written. See Dollhouse becomes pleasingly complex.

That's all the geek news for now...

Oh, wait! I almost forgot:

Discworld Fans: The North American Discworld Convention has now sold 550+ memberships out of a total of 900. If you are thinking of going, consider buying your titckets soon.


There, I hope that helped you get through Wednesday.

All good things,

Sia

Related Stories:

Iron Man reminds us that mythic stories still work

Josh Whedon: Honorary Pagan

Stephen Colbert and the Pagans

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Gardens To Come


The First Lady and her daughters recently broke ground for an organic garden at the White House. Check out this picture, it will make you smile. (1)

In many ways, we have Alice Waters to thank for this. Well done, Alice.

I live in the Pacific Northwest and local gardening expert Marci Degman advises that the cold ground makes germination impossible until May, at least. For a California girl used to working in her garden from late February through November this is both disquieting and sad.

As I write this, it is 60 degrees and sunny in my old neighborhood. Here at my new home we have snow flurries, very cold weather (to me, anyway) and rain. When I work on our property I wear about four layers and I have learned the truth of the old saying that "A hat is a second coat". I am, as they say, cocooning; waiting, wrapped and trapped in layers, like a nascent butterfly. l long for warmer weather when I can break out of all these clothes and warm my wings in sunlight.

Pendletons and Hoodies:

Whenever I take dog to the park I can always tell who's who. The native Oregonians take the rain, damp cold and occasional snow flurries in stride, while those of us who moved here from sun-kissed Western states like California or Arizona are freezing. You can tell who we are because we're bundled up to our ears. Whenever I hear someone at the park say, "I love how mild and warm it is here in Oregon" I know they moved here from Canada, Minnesota, or Alaska. The shorts they're wearing are also a clue. Whoever said "Things are not the way they are, things are the way we are" had the right of it when it comes to Oregon weather.


Right now, I'm jonesing for sunlight and warm, dry (yes, please, dry) weather. I may have to take a run south to get through this spring, but so far, so good. After three years in Oregon I'm am learning, as they say, to be a duck.

Bowls of Sunlight

Oh, but I miss (like a piece of my heart, I miss, I miss) my sages, my herbs, my native plants, and my citrus trees, especially my Myer lemon tree. Have you met the resplendent and versatile Myer? Imagine putting sunlight in a bowl or standing with your eyes closed in your garden breathing in a heady, sweet and woodsy scent while all around you bees buzz and dance with joy. Myer flowers are sexy and bold; and they will make your head swim with their rich perfume. And the color, well, their color is yellow on Prom Night.

Here is an excerpt from an NPR story titled The Meyer Lemon: More Than A Pretty face

A cross between a lemon and a mandarin orange, the Meyer lemon has smooth golden skin the color of a fresh egg yolk. It also has a thin edible rind, a high volume of juice and none of the tartness of a regular lemon — yet its potential in the kitchen went unnoticed.
Today, the Meyer lemon is a darling of farmers markets and beloved by chefs and home cooks. Its aromatic, slightly sweet quality brightens desserts, sauces, salads and roasts. In fact, Meyers may be substituted for regular lemons whenever you want a burst of lemon flavor without the acidic bite.

...Cut thin slices, remove the seeds and roast them with root vegetables, chicken or fish. Or combine them with dried fruit and white wine for a quick savory compote.

Another delicious way to enjoy the flavor of the whole fruit is in desserts. Cut a Meyer lemon into chunks, give it a rough chop in a food processor, and add to muffins or tea cakes. Meyer lemon bars showcase not only the sweet, aromatic juice, but also the slightly sour punch and intense lemon essence of the peel.

Meyers may be used anywhere you want to add pure lemon flavor with none of the burn. Squeeze the juice over fish or add to salad dressing. Grate the zest over risotto or steamed vegetables. In sweet foods such as marmalade, lemonade or lemon bars, the lower acid level means less sugar may be required.

- check out the link above for some recipes at NPR

Gardens to Come:

I am compensated for a cold spring by living in a verdant forest and by my daily encounters with the abundant wildlife we have around us; a far change from the life I knew in the concrete covered, car laden, work obsessed place that is Silicon Valley. Today, the birds are singing from the fir trees, and I'm longing to get out doors and get my hands in some dirt. I may not be able to garden as I'm used to, but I can get out my Seeds of Change catalog and update my garden book list. So, while I plan news gardens to come, I will point you to a lovely article/radio program from NPR titled London's Gardens: Allotments for the people from the ever wonderful Kitchen Sisters.

Check out the recipe for Wanderer's Soup.

Sia

Who is currently reading:
Month By Month Gardening In Oregon and Washington and
The American Woodland Garden: Capturing the Spirit of the Pacific Northwest

Related Articles:

Fruits of Labor: How to Grow An Edible Garden

Beauty and Meaning: Gardening Like a Green Witch

Obama Restaurant Watch

It's Personal: One Pagan's Views on the Environment

Endnotes:

(1) My thanks go out to Lively Earth to that link and to the link to an open letter to the Farmer-In-Chief on Food Policy by Michael Pollan.

Art: The Goddess Pomona, by Nicholas Foche, 1700
Pomona is the Roman Goddess of Fruitfullness, Orchards and Gardens

Photo: Bowl of Myer Lemons, found at NPR

Monday, March 23, 2009

Now the Green Blade Rises - Earthwise Version




Now the green blade rises from the buried grain,
Wheat that in the dark earth many years has lain;
Hope lives again, that with the dead has been:
Love is come again, like wheat that springs up green.

In the grave we laid him, blessed now by the rain,
Wondering if we'd ever see our joy again,
Laid in the earth like grain that sleeps unseen:
Love is come again, like wheat that springs up green.

Up he sprang at springtime, like the risen grain,
He that for long months within the earth had lain;
Up from the dead my risen hope is seen:
Love is come again, like wheat that springs up green.

When our hearts are saddened, grieving or in pain,
Here we plant the seeds and call back life again;
Fields of our hearts that dead and bare have been:
Love is come again, like wheat that springs up green.

Sia

Youtube Video:

Video at blog: French carol Noel Nouvelet played on guitar by Brad Sondah


This piece is often done with handbells. Here is another video version:
Piano and and handbell solo. (Close your eyes and it sounds like a concert at Hogwarts)

Original words: John M. C. Crum, in The Oxford Book of Carols, 1928.
Earthwise version: Sia Vogel
Music: Noël Nouvelet, 15th Century French melody
Now the Green Blade Rises - Here is the Easter version for our Christian friends.
Hat tip to Dance of the Elements

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Speaking of Bad Combos: Children and Aids


I believe Rachael Maddow said it best in the recent edition of Vanity Fair: "I think German and Pope are a bad combo".

While traveling in Africa, the Pope has declared that condoms should not be used to halt the spread of HIV/Aids and has actually argued that their distribution increases the problem.

The BBC report:


The spread of HIV and Aids in Africa should be tackled through fidelity and abstinence and not by condoms, Pope Benedict XVI has said.

...More than 60% of the world's 40m people with HIV live in sub-Saharan Africa.

In South Africa alone, 600-1,000 people are thought to die every day because of Aids.

Pope Benedict, who was elected to succeed John Paul II in April, has already signalled that he will maintain a strictly traditional line on issues including abortion and homosexuality.

The Washington Post reminds us that:

Pope Paul VI banned the use of contraception 37 years ago, and at that time the issue was almost entirely birth control. Ever since, high church officials have considered the question largely to be closed. But the AIDS pandemic has led to calls from some corners of the global church for authorizing at least one form of contraception -- condoms -- as a means of preventing HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, from spreading.

Two cardinals in Europe this week separately spoke of a hypothetical situation in which use of a condom might be justified: when a woman must have sex with someone who is infected with HIV and therefore must protect herself.

And in Mexico City, a bishop said at a news conference Friday that condom use could be a "lesser evil" if employed to prevent AIDS. "If someone is incapable of controlling their instincts . . . then they should do whatever is necessary in order not to infect others," said Felipe Arizmendi, bishop of San Cristobal de las Casas, in far southern Mexico.

The comments followed months of ferment in the church over how to approach AIDS prevention. Last year, the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD) published a paper urging a range of methods to fight AIDS.

"For many in Africa and Asia, sex is often the only commodity people have to exchange for food, school fees, exam results, employment or survival itself in situations of violence," the paper said. "Any strategy that enables a person to move from a higher-risk towards the lower end of the continuum, CAFOD believes, is a valid risk reduction strategy."


Sia

- who has German ancestory and is involved with interfaith work, but who also has really had it with this guy.

Hey, boys, how is dear Cardinal Law? Is he still enjoying his hideout, excuse me, job at the Vatican?


Links:


Respect for life? Aids Orphans in Africa

German Chancelor Censures Pope On Holocaust Denier
Excerpt:
Benedict, the first German pope in 500 years, has faced a fierce backlash from his home country for reversing the excommunication of a bishop who has questioned whether the Nazis systematically killed 6 million Jews during the Holocaust.

Irony Alert:
Church Excommunicates Child Rape Victim's Mother
Hat tip to Bligbi

Back Story: Humanae Vitae: The Papal Birth Control Letter issued in 1968

Notes on:
History of Contraception from Antiquity to the Present Day
Hat tip to the Sunshine for Women site - check out their book section



Photo: Cover of book titled Children of Aids by Emma Guest

Saturday, March 21, 2009

John Hodgman: Questions and Answers


What is wrong with this picture?

Don't they realize that this is the man who asked the great question: invisibility or flight?

Sia

Links:

John Hodgman

John Hodgman on the Daily Show

Photo: From John Hodgman's blog

Friday, March 20, 2009

Ostara Bunnies Everywhere



I have this little canon elf and I sometime use it to take pictures of Pagan imagery and totems (various) that I find in the dominant culture. I discovered this little faux chocolate egg wreath over at Pier One yesterday. Do you love it? I love it. (1)

I've spent the last week placing images of bunnies (and some lovely hares) all over the house. There are bunnies in clay, bunny candles, soft, fluffy bunnies (absolutely necessary, ask any green witch), pictures of bunnies and bunnies made from wood, metal and glass. There are eggs, too, all kinds, and some birds, as well, not to mention baskets, but it is bunnies who bless the home just now.

I got up at sunrise this morning to the sound of bird song in the trees and frogs croaking in the creek below me. Dog went with me as I filled our bird feeders and she sat quietly during ritual. (Good girl). It was simple and brief, as many of my rituals are. At the end of it, dog and I spread some apples and carrots in the lower meadow for the deer who will visit us later on, and yes, dog got some, too. Unlike me with chocolate, dog has some restraint, she will eat a few carrots and let the others lie. I don't often see rabbits in our field (they prefer the berry patch at the top of our road) but we do get regular visits from our mountain deer. I've already seen several of our does followed closely by last year's daughters. Blessings, friends. May you find safety here during the hunting season.

While filling the bird feeders (or should I say squirrel feeders?) in honor of the day, I got my Ostara gift: the words I needed to write a difficult letter to someone who is behaving badly.


I've been asked for guidance and support in this situation, and that I will give. Then I will hold my peace. Measured, firm compassion does not come naturally to me. I was raised in a family of verbal combatants; people who would far rather burn the village then save it, and that is sometimes my first and worst instinct. So, I'm grateful this morning for the access to my better self and, I hope, my better voice. It doesn't change what I have to say, but sometimes the how is just as important as the why.

Blessed Ostara to you and yours,

She who binds to herself a joy
Does the winged life destroy
But she who kisses the joy as it flies
Lives in eternity's sunrise
- William Blake

Sia

Endnotes:

(1) Attention Pagan shoppers - this is $25.00 I, for one, am going to wait for the after the Easter sales and if I can snake one, I'll use it next year. But do check out their little acrylic flower plates ($7.00 each) and the candle sales. Oh, and try Cost Plus as well. My gods, what a Pagan heaven that is. And don't forget to support your local earthwise shop - they need you now, more then ever.

Related Articles:

Ostara and Spring Equinox

The Moon & Hare

Sex and Scent in Ancient Times

Ostara from the Green Soul Guide
She offers some lovely ideas for ways to celebrate this holiday.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Extreme Sheep

It's been that kind of a day - one in which extreme sheep are not only useful but necessary for my sanity:



Sia

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Never get between a humpback whale and her dinner.



Wow. Just....wow.


Sia






Art: Whale (Haida style) by Paul Windsor, British Columbia. Much of his work is now offered in cards, t-shirts and prints by Native Northwest

Video: BBC program: Nature's Great Events

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman


Neil Gaiman was on The Colbert Report last night talking about The Graveyard Book. You can watch the interview at this link. (1)

St. Patrick's Day:

We all celebrate St. Patrick's Day in our own way. In honor of this day, I've donated money to a group that rescues abandoned and abused pet snakes; it's my own little joke. (2)

I also use this time to catch up on my Celtic history. Right now I'm reading
The Philosopher and the Druids and We Are But Women

Enjoy the show,

Sia

Links:

Reptile and Amphibian Rescue Groups/Shelters in the U.S.

Neil Gaiman's journal

Neil Gaiman is also on Twitter (sigh) and yes, I do follow him there. I'm developing a love/hate relationship with this Twitter thing-y.

Endnotes:

(1) On a sadder note: Condolences to Mr. Gaiman on the recent loss of his father.

(2) Does anyone else remember the inter-faith Return of the Snakes Parade in Berkeley? I don't think they hold it anymore, but it was fun while it lasted.

Related Posts:

The Perfect Job by Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman Wins Newberry Medal

Instructions by Neil Gaiman

Photo: Neil Gaiman - found at LitQuake (San Francisco Literary Festival) website

Monday, March 16, 2009

National Women's History Month: Taking the Lead To Save Our Planet


Today's post goes out in honor of Women's National History Month. The theme this year is Taking the lead to save our planet. The Women's History Project has an inspiring list of honorees on their website. The woman featured on the top of the list is a person heroine of mine, biologist and writer Rachel Carson. President Obama mentioned several great women in his proclamation, including Ms. Carson.

Ellen Swallow Richards is known to have been the first woman in the United States to be accepted at a scientific school. She graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1873 and went on to become a prominent chemist. In 1887, she conducted a survey of water quality in Massachusetts. This study, the first of its kind in America, led to the Nation's first state water-quality standards.

Women have also taken the lead throughout our history in preserving our natural environment. In 1900, Maria Sanford led the Minnesota Federation of Women's Groups in their efforts to protect forestland near the Mississippi River, which eventually became the Chippewa National Forest, the first Congressionally mandated national forest. Marjory Stoneman Douglas dedicated her life to protecting and restoring the Florida Everglades. Her book, The Everglades: Rivers of Grass, published in 1947, led to the preservation of the Everglades as a National Park. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1993.

Rachel Carson brought even greater attention to the environment by exposing the dangers of certain pesticides to the environment and to human health. Her landmark 1962 book, Silent Spring, was fiercely criticized for its unconventional perspective. As early as 1963,however, President Kennedy acknowledged its importance and appointed a panel to investigate the book's findings. Silent Spring has emerged as a seminal work in environmental studies. Carson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1980.

Grace Thorpe, another leading environmental advocate, also connected environmental protection with human well-being by emphasizing the vulnerability of certain populations to environmental hazards. In 1992, she launched a successful campaign to organize Native Americans to oppose the storage of nuclear waste on their reservations, which she said contradicted Native American principles of stewardship of the earth. She also proposed that America invest in alternative energy sources such as hydroelectricity, solar power, and wind power.

These women helped protect our environment and our people while challenging the status quo and breaking social barriers. Their achievements inspired generations of American women and men not only to save our planet, but also to overcome obstacles and pursue their interests and talents. They join a long and proud history of American women leaders, and this month we honor the contributions of all women to our Nation.

For the Family

The Family Education website offers a timeline, a quiz and a list of activies you can do with your children. Check it out.

Women Know Stuff:


Men explain things to me, and other women, whether or not they know what they're talking about. Some men.

Every woman knows what I'm talking about. It's the presumption that makes it hard, at times, for any woman in any field; that keeps women from speaking up and from being heard when they dare; that crushes young women into silence by indicating, the way harassment on the street does, that this is not their world. It trains us in self-doubt and self-limitation just as it exercises men's unsupported overconfidence.

The battle with Men Who Explain Things has trampled down many women -- of my generation, of the up-and-coming generation we need so badly, here and in Pakistan and Bolivia and Java, not to speak of the countless women who came before me and were not allowed into the laboratory, or the library, or the conversation, or the revolution, or even the category called human.

....Most women fight wars on two fronts, one for whatever the putative topic is and one simply for the right to speak, to have ideas, to be acknowledged to be in possession of facts and truths, to have value, to be a human being. Things have certainly gotten better, but this war won't end in my lifetime. I'm still fighting it, for myself certainly, but also for all those younger women who have something to say, in the hope that they will get to say it.

- from The Archipelago of Arrogance by Rebecca Solnit (Hat tip to Ana Marie Cox for the link)

Loved it. Love Them. Thank you, ladies, for showing us all what's possible, and a hug to all the men - Yes, Virginia, they do exist, just ask Michelle Obama - who listen, who love us and who treat us like equals.


Sia

Lest I Get Too Giddy:

German Gunman Targeted Women

Good News:

Funding Restored to the U.S. Populations Fund by President Obama

Hat tip to Echidne of the Snakes for the links to both these articles, and my special thanks for her wonderful story about the rescue of Deacon the dog. E. you made my day.



Sunday, March 15, 2009

Local Boys Free Dolphins Trapped In Ice


I watched the blood soaked, dystopian vision that is Watchmen yesterday (1) so today I need to be reminded that people can be good. People can be real good:

The dolphins had been stranded by a slab of ice since Sunday in White Bay off the coast of Seal Cove, a village of about 400 people. A chunk of ice was rapidly closing in around the mammals and threatening to suffocate them.

"You'd hear them crying, every night," said one of the men in the boat, Rodney Rice, 39. "I went down there last night and you could hear them trying to break up more ice. . . . They wouldn't have lasted another day."


Sia

Endnote:

(1) There are spoilers in the link to that review at The New Yorker. For you Kevin Smith fans, here is his take on this film.

Links:

Graphic novels
I'm told by Himself that Watchmen, the graphic novel is very different from the film. If he will let me put my paws on his first edition, I'll read it and compare the two.

- Hat tip to Captain Lightning for the link to this story.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Swan Lake and Russell Brand



It's Saturday and I want to go to a movie with my fella. Instead, I'm working from home, sending polite but firm emails to a team whose members not only need to get on the same page, they need to decide what book they're reading. Do you know the meaning of snafu? No? Well, this is a family blog (more or less) so I'm not going to tell you here - look it up. Anyway, this snafu-thing-y has me thinking about a delightful parody from my childhood, and thinking, " Come on, people! Do you want a chicken or a swan? The curtain's about to go up."

As the lady once said,

A chicken or a duck is a mistake
when you do Swan Lake.

...and if you really want to laugh (and cry and groan, as I am doing as I write these emails) read My Bonky Wook: A Memorior of Sex, Drugs and Stand Up by Russell Brand. You can read/listen to his NPR interview here. Oh...my....stars.

and now back to my little swans....

Sia
"Whattda gonna do? Shoot the swans? These lovelies!"

Need a sweet-hearted, funny (and very raunchy) movie for the weekend? Then rent Forgetting Sarah Marshal. Brand is the best thing in it but the whole cast is stellar, including "Kenneth the Page" from 30 Rock playing a repressed Christian on his honeymoon who can't enjoy sex with his pretty, eager wife until the jaded but kind rock star (Brand) shows him how.
Fair warning: Do not watch this with anyone who doesn't have a very bawdy (and I mean Elizabethan) sense of humor.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Pagans and Privacy: Email and Networking Sites



"In the '20s and '30s it was the role of government. '50s and '60s it was civil rights. The next two decades are going to be privacy. I'm talking about the Internet. I'm talking about cell phones. I'm talking about health records and who's gay and who's not. And moreover, in a country born on the will to be free, what could be more fundamental than this?"
- Aaron Sorkin, The West Wing

Who owns your data? Anyone with sense would say that it is you but Facebook recently tried to claim that they owned it and got trounced by their users in the process. This issue isn't dead; it will rise, zombi-like, again and again until some future court case decides it. (1) I think that Zack Stern said it best when it wrote this in P.C. World:

Social-networking sites can be excellent ways to communicate... But Facebook reminds us that these sites aren't your friends, they aren't tools to solve problems, and they aren't a bunch of kids trying to make something cool. They're cold, unfeeling businesses. Businesses exist to make money. So take a close look at the terms, especially when the services are free. Sometimes, cost-free can be expensive.
I am a Pagan person who works in the wider world. There are places where I can let my spiritual practice be known and places where I cannot, lest I loose my effectiveness in venues where I do good work. For this and other reasons, I value my privacy.

As a private person and as a woman of a certain age, I am frankly mystified by what information young people will give out about themselves without (it seems) thinking too much about it. As Emily Nussbaum notes, their motto seems to be: Say Everything.

Talking to her the night before, I had liked Kitty: She was warm and funny and humble...but reading her Livejournal, I feel thrown off. Some of it makes me wince. Much of it is witty and insightful. Mainly, I feel bizarrely protective of her, someone I’ve met once—she seems so exposed. And that feeling makes me feel very, very old.

...It’s been a long time since there was a true generation gap, perhaps 50 years—you have to go back to the early years of rock and roll, when old people still talked about “jungle rhythms.” Everything associated with that music and its greasy, shaggy culture felt baffling and divisive, from the crude slang to the dirty thoughts it was rumored to trigger in little girls. That musical divide has all but disappeared. But in the past ten years, a new set of values has sneaked in to take its place, erecting another barrier between young and old. And as it did in the fifties, the older generation has responded with a disgusted, dismissive squawk. It goes something like this:

Kids today. They have no sense of shame. They have no sense of privacy. They are show-offs, fame whores, pornographic little loons who post their diaries, their phone numbers, their stupid poetry—for God’s sake, their dirty photos!—online. They have virtual friends instead of real ones. They talk in illiterate instant messages. They are interested only in attention—and yet they have zero attention span, flitting like hummingbirds from one virtual stage to another.

...When I was in high school, you’d have to be a megalomaniac or the most popular kid around to think of yourself as having a fan base. But people 25 and under are just being realistic when they think of themselves that way, says media researcher Danah Boyd, who calls the phenomenon “invisible audiences.” Since their early adolescence, they’ve learned to modulate their voice to address a set of listeners that may shrink or expand at any time: talking to one friend via instant message (who could cut-and-paste the transcript), addressing an e-mail distribution list (archived and accessible years later), arguing with someone on a posting board (anonymous, semi-anonymous, then linked to by a snarky blog). It’s a form of communication that requires a person to be constantly aware that anything you say can and will be used against you, but somehow not to mind.

(This is a useful article, full of cultural insight. Read the whole thing.)

Some differing views on privacy are generational, it's true, but some of this comes down to having healthy boundaries and using common sense. I worry that what some folks choose share about themselves now will someday bite them on the behind.

What Do They Know and Why Do They Want To Know It?

I know, without liking it one bit, that whatever I write in private emails and in on-line groups may be read by people to whom they are not addressed, and they will do so, legally in most cases, and without my permission. Knowing that, I try to use caution and some common sense and I don't post anything I
really want kept private. I do not use Facebook, nor will I. I'm careful in other ways, as well.

Charlie Rose recently went to Silicon Valley and did a series of interviews with the movers and shakers there, including Marissa Mayer, Vice President of Search Products and User Information at Google. The bogger at Bleachblog was struck by the same moment that caught my attention, a casual comment made by Mayer about who knows what and why:

....Ms. Mayer said something that astounded me; Some specific credit card company knows with 80% accuracy who is going to get a divorce 2 years before the cardholders themselves... Ms. Mayer explained that the whether a person is to stay married greatly affects their ability to pay off debt and therefore affects their credit rating. I wonder who they could sell this information to. Divorce attorneys/ Counseling Services. I can see it now. You get a free pen in the mail from Dr. Staytogether's counseling service offering help for your pending divorce that you do not know about yet but with 80% accuracy will happen in 1.5 years. Amazing.

Ms. Mayers was referring to information contained in a book titled Super Crunchers. If you want a scary read, put down the Stephen King and read that, and The End of Privacy.

Linked In:

I know a good many Pagans who use Linked In for the same reasons that my friend Snakemoon and I do: we have a professional presence in the world and since information on our work is already out there, it's up to us to manage this information, the same way we manage any other part of our working life. Linked In is also a great way of finding a job or hiring when you have one to offer.

Tech Love:

I have worked with tech for most of my adult life. I have often worked in tech and I lived surrounded by technophiles in Silicon Valley for over a decade. One could even say I married into tech. (Hi, honey). I say this so you'll know I'm not a luddite. But I am an informed and cautious consumer, and I tell other Pagans this: What you choose to do in these cases is up to you, but allow me to urge caution. Data Mining is an epidemic and it's growing, along with worldwide Internet use and leaps in technology. It's a business and it is not in your best interest to give your Self away.
For example, Google (which already has privacy issues with G-mail) has recently leaped ahead in this issue and not in ways I like. Arts Technical writes:

Google's newest advertising strategy, behavioral targeting, has finally arrived. The strategy, referred to as "interest-based" advertising, will go beyond current targeted advertising practices and track your Internet usage habits in order to serve an ad that the search giant hopes is better suited for you. This means that, instead of visiting a music site and simply getting music-related ads, you might visit a music site and getting ads for the newest "Cats Meowing Christmas Carols" album—because Google knows you spend 95 percent of your Internet time at Catster.
That's charming if you love cats, but what about your other interests... hummm?

So...What Are You Reading?

Those of you who shop at Amazon.com know that they do the same sort of thing when they recommend a book for you based on your previous searches. Some people find this useful. I find it creepy and intrusive.

Teeny, tiny, tiny, print

...and by the way, they sell that information to other companies. That's how you got on that mailing list. Read the fine print, folks; it matters.

Sia

Endnotes:


(1) John Svoikla suggests four basic principals for this issue in his article titled What Facebook's Stumble Can Teach Your Company. He goes into some detail (read the whole thing) but these are, in brief:

1. Allow users to own their own content and identify
- Allow? really? look for some court cases on this issue in future.

2. Make all sharing options default to the most conservative setting
- in other words, ask your users to think twice before posting their most intimate details.

3. Create a better infrastructure for anonymity and tracking of content
- among other things, allow the user to remove certain content permanently

4. Don't sneak up on your audience
- be transparent. Let your users know, in clear language, what you are doing and why, and ask for their input.

Related Articles:

The blog that started the uproar at Facebook:
Facebook New Terms of Service: We Can Do Anything We Want With Your Data, Forever.

Think Social Network Blogs Can't Hurt You?
- protecting your health information

For the legally minded among us:
Security vs. Privacy: Reinterpreting the Fourth Amendment

Privacy Concerns: Facebook and Google
- an earlier essay by Yours Truly on this zombie-issue when rose again from the grave in 2008. It has some notes on privacy and G-mail that might be useful and a nifty picture of Maat

Video:

1. Facebook: Federal Human Data Mining Program

2. (humor) Facebook in Reality


Links:

Privacy International

Electronic Frontier Foundation

Electronic Communications Privacy Act

Privacy Rights Clearinghouse