Tuesday, April 28, 2009
The Ultimate Attraction Gabriella
Judge Tina Marras
s'origra is enthusiastic about parasites in
in mesu de chercos seculares
in perhaps have in COSTERAS in nuragheses,
in sos montes de fin de Sardinia
by-e Mount Rasu to Limbara
Gonare and Gennargentu
Meant prantu, and suspiru lamentu
animas de kenza Pasu in turmentu,
ch'invocan zustissia and consolu.
(Tina Judge Marras)
to trumas sun andende
that masones de lupos urulende
in sa prinz earth 'and terror.
in sas intragnas zughet ranchidore,
in TRAINOSE sambene no sos abba.
Donzi mad unu in pain, in
donz'ispina unu lamentu acutu.
Lezes Barbaras pro cust luttu
from land-and always barbaros cumandada:
to Seddon and isprone domada east, and Podiani
nd 'isperdian sa race! The
jughen always istrazz'istrazza
Piratas, galiottos, mercenarios,
prantan populos banderas de varios
furisteris zenia fall, Messan tancas de fructose, and
binzas livarios,
Semenan salt, and Fogu tribullia.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Easiest Area To Take Dmv Test Los Angeles
dae Massimo Fini
Levi-Strauss has made a hundred years. For this, and dare I say this only after decades of neglect, has returned to talk to him. Claude Levi Strauss, a singular figure of a philosopher, anthropologist, structuralist linguist, has the serious fault, it shares with another great contemporary thinker, which is also obscured, Karl Polanyi, particularly interested in the economic sphere, in a society that is, from this point of view, neither Marxist nor liberal, could not be scored either right or left. Not even his fault that could wash a hundred years if it is true that in all these months of celebrations has been said about him except to park in the most unorthodox and current of his thought: cultural relativism.
relativism without adjectives, philosophical, has a long tradition that runs from Montaigne to Voltaire to Nietzsche-criticism empiricism of Mach and Avenarius to get to the latest findings of physics modern. The first to transfer this concept in the social, political and ethical was Oswald Spengler's claim that all moral and religious principles, and all values \u200b\u200bhave meaning only in and for the duration of the civilization which developed and applied.
The original contribution of Lévi-Strauss is in having seen every culture as a system, with its internal compensation and its counterweights, a logically consistent set of factors closely related to each other (as in a language), so a any modification of one of them involves a modification of the others. It follows that you can not delete or extract from the "other" cultures aspects that we do not like - that is the arrogant claim that dominates in the West today - without fundamentally alter the entire system and almost always make the scaffolding collapse. And this is exactly why every Western intervention in the company of so-called Third World and in the even more archaic and primitive to have broken causes ruins unspeakable, inconsistent and created monstrous hybrids and eventually, in fact, destroyed those civilizations. As was the case for Islam if, under pressure from Western ideological and armed, the role of Muslim women was approved in what he has to us.
But Levi-Strauss also rejects that particular form of historicism is that evolution according to which the company starting from the simple (or apparent single) and going to the more complicated form is a single purpose and a single model in which the height is, of course, the western model of development which is today. It is absurd, says Levi-Strauss, to a company "a stage of development to another company. It is simply different companies, which start from different assumptions, each of which develops only some of the potential, and not others, present in human nature. The traditional ones tend to be static and give priority to the balance and harmony at the expense of economic efficiency and technology. Instead, the company "hot," as he calls Levi-Strauss, to which we belong, are dynamic and choose the efficiency and economic development to the detriment of the balance as "produce entropy, disorder, social conflict and political struggles, things against which the" primitive "is appropriate precautions and perhaps more conscious and systematic than they suppose. "
It is here that the discourse of Levi-Strauss is topical and it becomes particularly interesting for us. For two reasons, basically. Why, two and a half centuries the Industrial Revolution, we see what has caused acute discomfort in our lives, in terms of stress, anxiety, sealing nervosa, depression, anomie, the madman dynamism, the crazy speed of our development model, plus breaking the relations between men and the same constituent nuclei of a human being, depriving him of his instincts, his vitality, of its essence. And this is the main reason for our anti-modernism and of our struggle.
But there is a reason, so-called "external", which is almost as important. For Levi-Strauss, and for us, there are no "higher cultures". There are only different cultures, each with its own way. This is why we defend vigorously the principle of self-determination against the claim of the West of "reductio ad unum, ie to itself, the entire existing pretext of cultural superiority which is only a variant of the classic racism, Nazi memory, worse because more subtle, more hypocritical and more devastating because it is not content to conquer territories and peoples, he wants take their souls (one of the slogans with which the West tries to legitimize its military presence in Afghanistan is that we must "win the hearts and minds" of Afghans). But respect for other cultures did not, for us, only roots of principle. Approval of the world to a single model would be deadly in the literal sense of the word. For as popular wisdom says that we have lost "the salt of life is in diversity '
Friday, April 3, 2009
How To See Facebook Login History
dae Alberto Piccinini
Mark Ames, U.S. journalist, is the author of "Going Postal", a strong and provocative book that meticulously analyzes the massacres with Pluto in the U.S. workplace since the early 80s. Ames discovered in each history concret to anything but the unexplained madness, but the logic of workers 'crushed' by the transformation of their businesses in the style of Reaganomics. We asked him to comment on the massacre in Alabama, in connection with the publication of the Italian His book, later this month, for editions Isbn. "It 's too early to say what happened in Alabama, - he said - but the underlying reason must be sought in the economy, in the company where this man has committed suicide. I consider this as another battle of this lla which was a real class war in America, which lasted thirty years, ever since the Reganomics has transformed this country. The investigators, in Alabama, they are right when they say that some of the reasons for the carnage resulting from the fact that the killer was a 'disgruntled employee', and we know that the Reliable - the company where he worked - Started a couple of weeks ago a program of large-scale redundancies. These layoffs have scared the local community, which is already poor and desperate. The southern states like Alabama that are almost like mini-Third World countries, where wages are low, unions do not exist or are strongly opposed, and where they are offered huge tax breaks to companies because they move there. In other words, where workers are exploited to the bone. What is interesting about this case and seems to open a new trend within the framework of this new Great Depression is that a financially ruined man kill his entire family before taking his own life, as if he wanted his family must address not only shame but also the general economic devastation.
Your theory about the massacres in the workplace dates back to Reaganomics, and the transformation of human relations and business. Do not you think that it is this crisis (as well as the advent of Obama, and the new cultural climate that brings with it) will change the scenario?
When I presented my book in American libraries, a few years ago now, the most common question I was asked was "when will it all end?". I did not know what to say, except to say that probably all would be over when it happened some kind apocalyptic event like the Great Depression or World War II. With the financial collapse and the new Depression, it seems that the model of Reaganomics is staggering, so much to be impeached even by the same economic and political establishment. In any case, I remain skeptical. The big economic interests and the super-rich are fighting like crazy against Obama, and usually they win. Unlike the '30s, also, there is a strong counter-ideology that could replace the Reaganomics. The Left in the U.S. is too shy to even use the word "socialism". Obama speaks of "post-ideology" and "competence", but for me it is another way of say that the current ideology is still the dominant one.
From what you hear on TV and other media, what is the style in reaction to this massacre? Something is changing?
One new thing there. For the first time the media are starting to put these killings in the context of layoffs, corporate culture, economy. I remember last November when an engineer in Silicon Valley fired the manager of his company, and two of his colleagues, killing and wounding the other two first, all securities immediately pointed out the fact that he had been sacked and lost a lot of money. Now that the media are in a state of suffering also economic, with journalists losing their jobs, it is as if it were easier to find a form of identification with the perpetrators of these massacres. I think a lot of journalists have dreamed of killing dismissed their publishers.
Another report, from Germany, speaks of a massacre at a school. In Going Postal long have you been busy at Columbine. In that sense, the massacres in schools are linked to those occurring in the workplace?
not know the details of the massacre at that school, but I'm sure there are many differences. It 'clear that many massacres that have occurred in schools were inspired by their European Columbine, and that's exactly what they wanted the perpetrators of the massacre. In their video diary had clearly stated: "We want to start a revolution." And so have become "heroes" for literally hundreds, thousands and perhaps millions of children around the world, many of them belonging to middle class families. And it is something to which it seems that nobody wants to even think.
You can find the full comment by Mark Ames at: