radical psyche

Month

June 2013

3 posts

“Dear english speaking friends around the world, Brazil needs your help. Maybe some of you noticed an intense brazilian activity on facebook, posts with images and long texts about the protests, or maybe not. This morning though, the New York Times wrote about it, and that’s very good (also, the fb page World Riots 24/h talked about it a few days ago). But the problem is that this article is very very mild about what is really happening in São Paulo. I wrote this to help you understand what’s going on here.
I haven’t been to the protests yet for some reasons, but many of my friends (real world friends, not just-on-facebook friends) have been there, and it was really sad and revolting to read their texts tonight, about what’s really happening…
The NY Times doesn’t say that THE POLICE is not only starting the violence against peaceful citizens who want to protest the bus fees (and they have the right to, according to our constitution), but they’re also brutalizing people who have nothing to do with the protests: old ladies, college kids, workers. People who happened to be there, going home from work or from school were, for no reason at all, attacked with tear gas and rubber bullets. The police attacked journalists, students, ordinary citizens who were just passing by. They closed a subway station and threw tear gas bombs on the inside, so even people who were on a train, going home, were attacked. They also fired tear gas and rubber bullets on people while they were shouting “NO VIOLENCE, NO VIOLENCE”. They fired against people on their knees, or lying on the ground with their hands on their heads. Some of them also put fire on trash bags and tires; at least one of them (the one who happened to be filmed while doing it) broke the windows of his own car. If they could make believe, through the media, that the protesters did it, they can also say they “just defended themselves”.
We are living in a city where the police acts without identification and under the orders of the state governor and the consent of the city mayor. And our news papers and TV networks are not telling the truth about it either. I wrote this in order to ask you for your help: help the world to know what is happening in Brazil, help the world to see how our police is acting against the people, and how our government doesn’t represent us anymore!”
—My friend Marilia “Bombom” Jardim in Sao Paulo, on the Sao Paolo bus fare protests. Marilia is a costumer who helps run Dr. Sketchy’s in Brazil.  Here’s the NY Times article she’s talking about. (via mollycrabapple)
Jun 15, 2013319 notes
“This CEO’s name is Joseph P. Nacchio and TODAY he’s still serving a trumped-up 6-year federal prison sentence today for quietly refusing an NSA demand to massively wiretap his customers.” —You commit three felonies a day
Jun 10, 2013
“In the absence of certainty or proof, how can we overcome cynicism (either inner or outer)? We cannot overcome it. We can, however, address the wound that generates it. Cynicism guards a wound of idealism dashed and hope betrayed. Anything that reawakens our childlike (naïve) knowledge that a more beautiful world is possible generates, alongside the uplifting feeling of hope, an upwelling of fear, grief, and pain. We are afraid we will be disappointed once more. It is much safer not to believe, safer to dismiss it as idealistic, impractical, impossible. From that pain also comes the derisiveness that often accompanies skepticism. That may be why unorthodox scientific theories or phenomena that suggest there is order, intelligence, and purpose in the universe outside ourselves draw such virulent criticism.” —

The Cynic and the Boatbuilder | Reality Sandwich, Charles Eisenstein.

[Yes, only I would offer that, given what we now face, it is no longer safe to be cynical.]

Jun 3, 2013
#cynicism #hope #idealism #a better world is possible #dreamers #gift economy #charles eisenstein

May 2013

1 post

The Work & Writing of Laurie Penny: In these Sour Times: Islamophobia and the Woolwich aftermath → penny-red.com

penny-red:

Three days ago, a soldier was murdered in Woolwich by two Islamic extremists carrying knives and meat cleavers. The entire country went bananas. That night, there was a rally in Woolwich town centre by the English Defence League, whose status as the drunken fantasist Mr Bean of fascists hardly…

May 25, 2013184 notes

April 2013

2 posts

“What we really see here is how the largest and most corrupt corporations own not just the government but also the culture. Even at the San Francisco Gay Pride Parade, once an iconic symbol of cultural dissent and disregard for stifling peities, nothing can happen that might offend AT&T and the Bank of America. The minute something even a bit deviant takes place (as defined by standards imposed by America’s political and corporate class), even the SF Gay Pride Parade must scamper, capitulate, apologize, and take an oath of fealty to their orthodoxies (we adore the military, the state, and your laws). And, as usual, the largest corporate factions are completely exempt from the strictures and standards applied to the marginalized and powerless. Thus, while Bradley Manning is persona non grata at SF Pride, illegal eavesdropping telecoms, scheming banks, and hedge-fund purveryors of the nation’s worst right-wing agitprop are more than welcome.” —Bradley Manning is off limits at SF Gay Pride parade, but corporate sleaze is embraced | Glenn Greenwald | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
Apr 27, 2013
Apr 14, 2013
#recipe #comfort food #danette's feast

March 2013

1 post

“How on earth did this happen to the reader in chief? What became of literature’s vaunted power to inspire empathy? Why was the candidate Obama, in word and in deed, so radically different from the President he became? In Andrei Tarkovsky’s eerie 1979 masterpiece, “Stalker,” the landscape called the Zona has the power to grant people’s deepest wishes, but it can also derange those who traverse it. I wonder if the Presidency is like that: a psychoactive landscape that can madden whomever walks into it, be he inarticulate and incurious, or literary and cosmopolitan.” —A Reader’s War : The New Yorker
Mar 9, 2013

January 2013

2 posts

Play
Jan 22, 2013
Jan 12, 2013

December 2012

1 post

Dec 13, 20121 note

October 2012

2 posts

“happiness is actually quite simple. The primary components are decent health, a sense of security, of community, and of meaning. Unfortunately, all of these basic human aspirations are thwarted by global capitalism” —Weird Worlds and Alternate Realities: A Burning Man Reflection | Reality Sandwich
Oct 10, 2012
“I think that our time has a sickness. Art has the goal to bring us back to consciousness, that means spirituality. So I say that an art is only an art when it can heal. I have done it to myself, and to others. Healing means to bring us to a superior degree of being. This is the goal of art. When art is sincerely critical, it awakens. But it does not make you move forward. But the goal of art is not only to show what is wrong, it’s to also show what is good. Art of value changes you for the better. Not the one that provokes a revolution — that is not the aim of art, that is the aim of politics. Art is not political or politics. We must not confuse them. Art must take one to beauty, outside of criticism.” —Alejandro Jodorowsky, Poetic Re-Evolution: An Interview with Alejandro Jodorowsky and Pascale Montandon | Reality Sandwich
Oct 1, 2012

September 2012

1 post

“Most of my life, I would have doubted myself and backed down. Having public standing as a writer of history helped me stand my ground, but few women get that boost, and billions of women must be out there on this six-billion-person planet being told that they are not reliable witnesses to their own lives, that the truth is not their property, now or ever. This goes way beyond Men Explaining Things, but it’s part of the same archipelago of arrogance.” —Best of TomDispatch: Rebecca Solnit, The Archipelago of Arrogance | TomDispatch
Sep 29, 2012

August 2012

4 posts

‘Economic suicides’ shake Europe as financial crisis takes toll on mental health - The Washington Post → washingtonpost.com
Aug 30, 2012
#economic suicides
“There’s a lesson here for progressives who wonder why their movement has so much trouble gaining political traction with the masses. Yes, the masses are manipulated, but not as much as many progressives think. The problem progressives ignore is that they still believe what they learned in civics class: Give the people the true facts and their minds will lead them to logical conclusions. What the civics teacher left out is the powerful, perhaps ineradicable, human tendency to look for meaning by thinking in (or by means of) mythic narratives. This poll suggests that a majority of Americans are listening with a somewhat open mind to the traditional populist narrative: It’s the rich bosses against the little guy, and it’s government’s job to balance the scales.” —Why Are Americans So Confused? | Common Dreams
Aug 24, 2012
#storytelling
Play
Aug 22, 2012
#ocean #healing
“Here, you see the logic of the modern industrial food system in its rawest form—a logic of prioritizing profit over human and environmental welfare. A lot has changed in the 400 years since the Elmina Fort was built, but this principle has not gone away. The logic of the plantation is the logic of today’s industrial food system.” —A Critical Mass for Real Food by Anim Steel — YES! Magazine
Aug 9, 2012

July 2012

1 post

“As many as 20 big banks have been named in various investigations or lawsuits alleging that LIBOR was rigged. The scandal also corrodes further what little remains of public trust in banks and those who run them.” —The LIBOR scandal: The rotten heart of finance | The Economist
Jul 24, 2012
#LIBOR

June 2012

7 posts

“The 2012 Texas Republican Party Platform, adopted June 9 at the state convention in Forth Worth, seems to take a stand against, well, the teaching of critical thinking skills. Read it for yourself: …” —Hullabaloo, Critical thinking for dummies, by digby
Jun 29, 2012
Jun 25, 2012365 notes
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Jun 23, 2012
“According to neuroscientists, the main psychological effect of giving someone a load of power is that it makes them less empathetic. The further they climb, the smaller and fuzzier everyone looks below.” —New Statesman - Obama and the drones: the neuroscience of power
Jun 19, 2012
“Recently Emily White, an intern at NPR All Songs Considered and GM of what appears to be her college radio station, wrote a post on the NPR blog in which she acknowledged that while she had 11,000 songs in her music library, she’s only paid for 15 CDs in her life. Our intention is not to embarrass or shame her. We believe young people like Emily White who are fully engaged in the music scene are the artist’s biggest allies. We also believe–for reasons we’ll get into–that she has been been badly misinformed by the Free Culture movement. We only ask the opportunity to present a countervailing viewpoint.” —Letter to Emily White at NPR All Songs Considered. | The Trichordist
Jun 18, 2012
Jun 14, 2012
“As long as people have the strength to fight for human dignity in an age of austerity, a poorer, meaner society, a society built on shame, may yet be held at bay.” —Laurie Penny: Shame has become our stick for beating the poor - Commentators - Opinion - The Independent
Jun 1, 20121 note
#austerity #human needs

May 2012

3 posts

“In frightening, desperate times, the impulse to cede power to those who merely feel themselves deserving of it can be overwhelming. Even in a post-hope generation, all it takes is a few people to say no …” —

Laurie Penny: It’s not good enough just to want to be in power - Commentators - Opinion - The Independent

Some reflections on Mitt Romney, the bully, and beyond.

May 27, 2012
“The most important choice now facing most people is no longer about living a life with dignity and freedom, but facing the grim choice between survival and dying.” —The Occupy Movement and the Politics of Educated Hope
May 22, 2012
“it is only through the impractical, through that which can empower our imagination, that we will be rescued as a species. The prosaic world of news events, the collection of scientific and factual data, stock market statistics and the sterile recording of deeds as history do not permit us to understand the elemental speech of imagination. We will never penetrate the mystery of creation, or the meaning of existence, if we do not recover this older language. Poetry shows a man his soul, Goddard wrote, “as a looking glass does his face.” And it is our souls that the culture of imperialism, business and technology seeks to crush.” —Chris Hedges | The Implosion of Capitalism
May 5, 2012

April 2012

10 posts

“The state of the world is what it is in large part because people in positions of great power think this absurd buffoon of man is a Very Serious Person.” —Eschaton
Apr 17, 2012
“Even though this crisis in Japan has been described as “a nuclear war without a war” and the US Military is being reported is now stocking up on massive amounts of anti-radiation pills in preparation for nuclear fallout, there remains no evidence at all the ordinary peoples are being warned about this danger in any way whatsoever.” —Russia Stunned After Japanese Plan To Evacuate 40 Million Revealed | EUTimes.net
Apr 16, 2012
#fukushima #nuclearfallout #censorship #propaganda
Apr 10, 20121 note
#neweconomy
Josh Ryan-Collins - The strange case of the Nobel economist who doesn’t understand how banks work | the new economics foundation → neweconomics.org
Apr 10, 2012
Corruption Responsible for 80% of Your Cell Phone Bill → republicreport.org
Apr 9, 2012
“we are born not with a propensity for good or for evil. Rather, we are born with a bundle of needs we want to fulfill, from infancy to death, and with a profound sensitivity to having our efforts to meet our needs, or even our needs themselves, thwarted or shamed.” —What Drives Some People to Do Horrific Things and Others to Be Good? | | AlterNet
Apr 7, 2012
“The money system and its underlying mythology necessitate the roles that the power elite fill. Remove those people without changing the underlying beliefs, and new tyrants will rise to take their place. However strong our idealism, do we imagine that our revolution against evil will produce results any better than the French Revolutionaries or the Bolsheviks did? The War against Evil never ends, because it generates a limitless supply of new enemies, progeny of its own shadow.” —Thrive: The Story is Wrong but the Spirit is Right « Charles Eisenstein
Apr 6, 2012
“In the new world of the National Security Complex, no one can be trusted—except the officials working within it, who in their eternal bureaucratic vigilance clearly consider themselves above any law. The system that they are constructing (or that, perhaps, is constructing them) has no more to do with democracy or an American republic or the Constitution than it does with a Soviet-style state. Think of it as a phenomenon for which we have no name. Like the yottabyte, it’s something new under the sun, still awaiting its own strange and ugly moniker.” —The US Government Is Data Mining You | Mother Jones
Apr 6, 2012
Meet the Three ALEC Supporting Corporate Giants Who Dare You to Boycott Them → politicususa.com
Apr 6, 2012
“Today’s suicide of a Greek pensioner was symbolic; it will not be the last that we see.” —Olivier Vardakoulias - The human tragedy of Greek austerity | the new economics foundation
Apr 4, 2012
#lifeordeatheconomy

March 2012

12 posts

Matt Taibbi: Bank of America Is a “Raging Hurricane of Theft and Fraud” → truth-out.org
Mar 29, 2012
“We need to be communicating as simply as possible an empirically based picture of a better world we should be moving towards - a world capable of inspiring people.” —Richard Wilkinson interview: ‘The Spirit Level’ three years on | Red Pepper
Mar 28, 2012
#storytelling #thespiritlevel
“Let me say from the very beginning that we at Black Agenda Report do not think that Barack Obama is the Lesser Evil. He is the more Effective Evil. He has been more effective in Evil-Doing than Bush in terms of protecting the citadels of corporate power, and advancing the imperial agenda. He has put both Wall Street and U.S. imperial power on new and more aggressive tracks – just as he hired himself out to do.” —Why Barack Obama is the More Effective Evil | Black Agenda Report
Mar 28, 2012
Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died - latimes.com → latimesblogs.latimes.com
Mar 28, 2012
“They [the police] were getting the connection between the banks and abusive power,” says Manski. Much to her relief, the day’s action had brought attention back to the issues and those who need to be held accountable. She couldn’t help but wonder about possible next steps: “Wouldn’t it be great to have a whole march on Wall Street with everyone dressed as bankers?” —Finally, OWS gets police to arrest the people in suits / Waging Nonviolence - People-Powered News and Analysis
Mar 27, 2012
#storytelling #ows
Play
Mar 18, 2012
#thisamericanlife #mike daisey #retraction #storytelling
Democratic Senators Issue Strong Warning About Use of the Patriot Act → nytimes.com

In a letter to the attorney general, two Democratic senators expressed skepticism of a secret “intelligence collection operation” and called for more transparency.

Mar 18, 2012
Mar 18, 20125,212 notes
“SARAH : So you’re suggesting that scarcity needn’t be a guiding principle of our economic system. But isn’t scarcity absolutely fundamental to economics, especially in a world of limited resources? BERNARD : My analysis of this question is based on the work of Carl Gustav Jung because he is the only one with a theoretical framework for collective psychology, and money is fundamentally a phenomenon of collective psychology.” —Beyond Greed and Scarcity by Bernard Lietaer - alternative monetary systems
Mar 9, 2012
Play
Mar 9, 2012
All Work and No Play: Why Your Kids Are More Anxious, Depressed - Esther Entin - Health - The Atlantic → theatlantic.com
Mar 3, 2012
Play
Mar 1, 2012
#gifteconomy #neweconomy #storytelling
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