Archive for the 'war' Category
photoshop of horrors
What better way to get back to blogging after a 2.5 month break than with The Daily Show, Photoshop, and Rick Astley:
Posted by
Bill on
July 15th, 2008 .
Filed under:
just for fun, war |
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designing legacy
Very quickly, from The Chronicle of Higher Education (some comments later in the week when I have a chance to relax a bit):
I strongly recommend the Chronicle Review’s Architecture Issue (March 9, 2008), with which I am just getting started.
Posted by
Bill on
March 12th, 2008 .
Filed under:
academia, art, mapping, spaces, war |
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another blog for peace

Via Cynthia over at The Blogora, One Million Blogs for Peace.
Posted by
Bill on
November 28th, 2007 .
Filed under:
war |
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the onion takes on clooney and damon taking on darfur
Posted by
Bill on
November 19th, 2007 .
Filed under:
just for fun, war |
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on veterans day
A good friend from from Texas blogs at Ima Shalom under the name Maya. Her recent post, pre-Veterans Day, reminded me of great work that the Patriot Guard Riders are still doing.
Listen to this NPR story about what they are doing for families of the fallen and for sailors, soldies, and marines upon coming home:
A funny thing happened to Army Spc. Jeremiah Sullivan after his recent return from Iraq. As he and his fiancée were on their way home from Fort Bragg, N.C., they stopped at a gas station and were abruptly circled by a motorcycle brigade, gathered to welcome the soldier home.
The event was planned by the Patriot Guard Riders, a grassroots group that just keeps growing.
Over the past year . . . 61,000 strangers have come together to do works of good will: homecomings, visits to veterans hospitals, even house-painting. Sadly, though, their chief mission — done only with family approval — is to attend the funerals of military personnel.
Posted by
Bill on
November 17th, 2007 .
Filed under:
peace, war |
1 Comment »
everything great in iraf
Posted by
Bill on
October 24th, 2007 .
Filed under:
just for fun, war |
No Comments »
classifying peace and genocide
The Nobel Foundation has awarded the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and in doing so have continued to refine the characteristics of peace. By locating efforts to fight global warming and climate change within the peace category (instead of, say, chemistry or economics), the Foundation is supporting Gore’s (and others) argument that fighting global warming is a moral issue, as well as a rhetorical issue and, I would argue, a spatial issue. The geographical spaces that are going to be most affected (or have been most affected) by climate change are going to become war zones, where people fight for scarce resources:
“It is a question of war and peace,” Mr. Egeland, now director of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs in Oslo, told the Associated Press. “We’re already seeing the first climate wars, in the Sahel belt of Africa.” He said nomads and herders are in conflict with farmers because the changing climate has brought drought and a shortage of fertile lands.
Yesterday, in another act of classifying, the House Foreign Relations Committee, in a non-binding resolution, voted to label the 1915 killings of 1.5 million Armenians by the Turks as “genocide.” The Bush administration countered by calling the atrocities “historic mass killings.” (Update: Ira Schorr noted possible political reasons for the creation of the resolution.) As usual, The Daily Show offered the most meaningful assessment of the ironical and political ramifications of such a vote:
Posted by
Bill on
October 12th, 2007 .
Filed under:
classification, peace, spaces, war |
No Comments »
“This is a song about things that shouldn’t happen here happening here.”
Bruce, “Living in the Future,” on the TODAY show. Video from Taylor Marsh.
Posted by
Bill on
September 30th, 2007 .
Filed under:
generalnews, war |
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(re)composing landscapes
Today, as part of International Day of Peace activities, Rowan University’s College of Fine Arts hosted an exhibition of Pinwheels for Peace (1 of 4 such exhibitions in Glassboro, NJ) on the lawn between Science and Westby Halls.

This non-political organization aims to provide an alternative to the violent images that bombard children via TV, video games, and the movies. The organization web site says that it is their “hope that through the Pinwheels for Peace project, we can help the students make a public visual statement about their feelings about war/ peace/ tolerance/ cooperation/ harmony/ unity and, in some way, maybe, awaken the public and let them know what the next generation is thinking.”
I walked over to the exhibition with Sandy Tweedie, expecting to take a few pictures of it for an old friend who is an elementary school art teacher, and then be on my way to the Amish market in Mullica Hill. I didn’t expect there to be a table outfitted with markers and pastels so that passers-by could make their own. Some of the pinwheels were exceptional–amazing colors, wonderful patterns–and clearly took a lot of time and thought. On the other hand, my pinwheel (front and back):
Posted by
Bill on
September 21st, 2007 .
Filed under:
art, peace, photography, spaces, war |
No Comments »
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