Posts from July 2013
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Rad Geek People’s Daily 2013-07-21 – Shameless Self-promotion Sunday [via Facebook]
To-day Rad Geek People’s Daily [radgeek.com]: Shameless Self-promotion Sunday
Rad Geek People’s Daily 2013-07-21 – Shameless Self-promotion Sunday
This is a page from the Rad Geek People’s Daily weblog, which has been written and maintained by Charles Johnson at radgeek.com since 2004.
via Facebook http://radgeek.com/gt/2013/07/21/shameless-self-promotion-sunday-70/
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/webdr01/2013/2/26/13/enhanced-buzz-28745-1361903842-10.jpg [via Facebook]
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/webdr01/2013/2/26/13/enhanced-buzz-28745-1361903842-10.jpg
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/webdr01/2013/2/26/13/enhanced-buzz-30007-1361903815-4.jpg
In which some examples of Soviet graphic arts become pretty good metaphorical representations of the Soviet Union itself.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/copyranter/11-wonderfully-violent-soviet-work-safety-posters
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/webdr01/2013/2/26/13/enhanced-buzz-28745-1361903842-10.jpg
via Facebook http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/webdr01/2013/2/26/13/enhanced-buzz-28745-1361903842-10.jpg
July 19, 2013 at 07:24PM [via Facebook]
O.K., guerrilla marketing street team for World War Z, you found the perfect location to add your stencil, and this was some really effectively creepy urban art, I’ll give you that. From the walk out to Estrela on our last day in Lisbon.
[via Facebook]
Pro-Choice in Auburn? Let’s Talk
There’s going to be a meet-up in Auburn, Alabama in a couple of weeks to discuss reproductive rights, access to abortion in east Alabama, Alabama’s laws restricting clinics and access, and projects to start an abortion fund in east Alabama to help overcome barriers to access, and what we can do together to resist stigmatization, overturn anti-abortion laws, and build more of a community supporting reproductive freedom for women in Alabama, the South, and the U.S. Plans will be made, bread will be broken, light refreshments will be served. Contact alabamaaccess@gmail.com for details. Come on out if you’re pro-choice in the Opelika & Auburn community.
When: Saturday, August 3, 2013
Time: 4:00pm
Contact alabamaaccess@gmail.com for details.
Rad Geek People’s Daily 2013-07-19 – First annual New Orleans Anarchist Bookfair, October 19-20,… [via Facebook]
To-day @ radgeek.com: http://radgeek.com/gt/2013/07/19/first-annual-new-orleans-anarchist-bookfair-october-19-20-2013/ First annual New Orleans Anarchist Bookfair, October 19-20, 2013.
Rad Geek People’s Daily 2013-07-19 – First annual New Orleans Anarchist Bookfair, October 19-20,…
This is a page from the Rad Geek People’s Daily weblog, which has been written and maintained by Charles Johnson at radgeek.com since 2004.
via Facebook http://radgeek.com/gt/2013/07/19/first-annual-new-orleans-anarchist-bookfair-october-19-20-2013/
Google Maps [via Facebook]
N.B.: if you have been reading recent news headlines, I think it is important to mention that the city of Detroit has not been destroyed over the past few days. The city of Detroit is not over, and the city of Detroit has not failed. It’s still right there, where it has been all these years; see, here it is: https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=42.331427,-83.045754&spn=0.349235,0.837021&t=h&z=11&lci=com.panoramio.all What has happened is that the single most confining and abusive and irresponsible institution within the city of Detroit — the city government which latched onto the city of Detroit and has tried to rule and exploit it for decades — the city government which has sold out Detroit to the auto cartel and to corporate developers at every opportunity — the city government whose attitude towards the people of the city has over the years ranged from one of constant low-level antagonism and hectoring to one of repression and open warfare — the city government which is now run by an appointed “Emergency Manager” installed in a last effort to loot the city without the normal political restraints, for the sake of institutional bondholders, before it came to this pass — has announced that it no longer wants to pay off the people and the institutions and the banks who paid in advances in the promise that they would later get a cut of future tax revenues. The government has taken over and inserted itself into so many parts of the city that this will make things rough, perhaps even rougher than they already were, although the reasons that are given for thinking that that is the obvious outcome often depend on some assumptions about the role of the government in Detroit which I think are probably false. (If it is hard to allocate more money to the Detroit police department, is that going to make life worse in the city? It probably depends on what end of the stick you find yourself on.)
But Detroit is not the crisis of a handful of elected, appointed and installed government. Detroit is the Ujama Food Coop and the Masonic Temple, UAW Local 174 and the Reuther Library and the Tigers, Friday fish-fries and Paczki Day, the Red Wings and the Pistons, the Movement Electronic Music Festival and John King Books, the Eastern Market and the Afro-American Music Festival and the People’s Pierogi Collective, Rosa Parks and Grace Lee Boggs, barbeque and fresh kielbasa, the Michigan Citizen and the Metro Times, the Rouge plant and Fifth Estate and the long history of displacement, homecoming, work, food, culture, strife, love and building that the city grows out of. Detroit is better, stronger, more resilient and much more important than the government’s budget. Detroit did not cause this crisis; the city government and the state government and the bankers and institutions they deal with, who dominate and exploit Detroit, did that. Detroit has not been ended and it will not be killed by this crisis, because Detroit never depended on the city government or the state government or the institutions they deal with to grow or survive or thrive; it depends on its people, the collision and seeping-together of its many cultures and subcultures and neighborhoods and scenes, on people’s work and their experiments and their craft and their solidarity and mutual aid. Detroit is its people, not its politics, and it will live on in those people over, above, beyond, and in spite of, the ongoing efforts of an “austerity” government to somehow bail out and save its political takeover of people’s space and public institution. Everyone would be better off at this point if the “austerity” government just took this as an opportunity packed it in and left the city entirely alone, rather than an attempt to somehow auction off, bail out and save the essential command-posts for its political takeover of people’s space and public life. But even without that, the city continues, and lives, no matter how much the politics falls apart.
Find local businesses, view maps and get driving directions in Google Maps
via Facebook https://maps.google.com/maps?ll=42.331427%2C-83.045754&spn=0.349235%2C0.837021&t=h&z=11&lci=com.panoramio.all
July 18, 2013 at 06:42PM [via Facebook]
Some more photos from Lisboa. If you’ve been wondering what the hell that thing in my cover image is, it’s my favorite grafitti mural in Lisbon, which is (I’ve recently confirmed) still there, on the Rua da Vinha in Bairro Alto. Here’s a photo from this summer which gets the whole thing from the stairs that lead up to it, and then a panoramic from a standpoint facing the middle of the wall.
July 17, 2013 at 10:34PM [via Facebook]
might have made it home tonight, but is rained out at the Budget Inn Sewanee Ga. instead.
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