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Joe Manchin – The Democrat blocking progressive change is beholden to big oil.

July 20, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The Democrat blocking progressive change is beholden to big oil. Surprised? The Guardian – Alex Kotch 20-JUL-2021 Joe Manchin owns millions of dollars in coal stock, founded an energy firm and Exxon lobbyists brag about their access to him. Republicans fund raise on his behalf

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Finanace, Politics, Science, the Anthropocene Tagged: Big Oil, coal, conflict-of-interest, Edison Electric Institute, Enersystems, ethics, Exxon, filibuster, Joe Manchin, lobbyists, Republicans, West Virginia

FIP

July 19, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

I am reading an article in the Atlantic – “What Will Happen to My Music Library When Spotify Dies?”. I do use some music streaming services and there is one which I think is an exceptional value, because it is free. I first heard of FIP while living in Switzerland. A friend of ours who … [Read more…]

Posted in: IT Failures, Modern Music, Politics, the Anthropocene, Thinking about Tagged: Brewster Kahle, ELECTRO, FIP, France, French, GROOVE, Internet Archive, jazz, MONDE, NOUVEAUTÉS, POP, Radio France, REGGE, ROCK, Spotify, streaming, www.fip.fr

1969 Greensboro uprising

July 18, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

While correcting the texts for the San Bernardino Sun, 24 May 1969 on the California Digital Newspaper Collection, I came across a couple of pages full of articles on the various incidents occurring at that time on college campuses across the country. There was mention of strikes at UC Riverside in solidarity with student strikers … [Read more…]

Posted in: California Newspaper Archive, Politics, Racism Tagged: 1969, black militants, Black Power, Claude Barnes, Greensboro, Greensboro Association of Poor People (GAPP), James B. Dudley High School, National Guard, Nelson Johnson, Nixon, Nixon Administration, North Carolina A&T University, protective custody, Scott Hall, tear gas, Willie Grimes

the most influential racist you’ve never heard of

July 16, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In an obituary today in the NY Times describes the life of William H. Regnery II, “Buzzfeed called him ‘the most influential racist you’ve never heard of.’ ” It is interesting to me as I’m wondering of late who the people are who are bankrolling the alt-right, other than the Murdoch and Koch families. Here … [Read more…]

Posted in: Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: affirmative action, alt-right, Charles Martel Society, ethnostates, eugenics, Immigration, Koch, Murdoch, Obituary, Richard Spencer, The Occidental Quarterly, white identity, white supremacist, white supremacy, William H. Regnery II

Nazis, fear and violence: when reporting from Berlin was dangerous

July 14, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In the series of Guardian Retrospectives, this popped up and due to my current reading in this era in Europe and Russia, it stands out as a good example of the times. Nazis, fear and violence: when reporting from Berlin was dangerous Read it and let me know if you think there is a parallel … [Read more…]

Posted in: Politics, Racism Tagged: appeasement, Berlin, Brown Terror, European history, Foreign correspondent, Frederick Augustus Voigt, George Grosz, Germany, Gestapo, Guardian, Hitler, international correspondent, Jew baiting, Nazis, Third Reich

Everyone should read this The 3 Simple Rules That Underscore the Danger of Delta

July 5, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Everyone should read this From the Atlantic: The 3 Simple Rules That Underscore the Danger of Delta Vaccines are still beating the variants, but the unvaccinated world is being pummeled. By Ed Yong

Posted in: Faits Divers, Pandemic, Science Tagged: Alpha variant, AstraZeneca, B.1.1.7, B.1.617.2, breakthrough cases, Coronavirus, COVID-19, deadlier, Delta variant, Immunocompromised, Long-COVID, long-haulers, Moderna, Novavax, Pfizer-BioNTech, unvaccinated, Vaccines, variants

About Perma.cc

July 5, 2021 by sergneri 1 Comment

Perma.cc is a service that helps anyone who needs to cite to the web create links to their references that will never break. Perma.cc prevents link rot. What is Perma.cc? When a user creates a Perma.cc link, Perma.cc archives the referenced content and generates a link to an archived record of the page. Regardless of … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Future of Work, IT Failures, Science, Thinking about Tagged: archives, Broken links, citations, Harvard Law School Library, Internet, link rot, Perma.cc, references

Jon Hassell, avant-garde US composer, dies aged 84

June 27, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

A nice obituary, by Alexis Petridis on the Guardian for Jon Hassell, a musician who blew me away in 1980 with sounds I couldn’t categorize. I still can’t. as Eno put it, “one overriding principle in Jon’s work [was] that of respect – he looks at the world with all its momentary and evanescent moods … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Modern Music, Obituaries, Pandemic, the Anthropocene, Thinking about Tagged: 1980, avant-garde, Brian Eno, Can, David Sylvian, electronic effects, Fourth World 1: Possible Musics, global sounds, Hassell, Holger Czukay, Indian music, Irmin Schmidt, jazz, John Cale, Jon Hassell, Karlheinz Stockhausen, La Monte Young, Pandit Pran Nath, Peter Gabriel, raga, Robert Moog, sampling, Sterling Morrison, Talking Heads, Tears for Fears, Terry Riley, Theatre of Eternal Music, trumpet, trumpet player

Opinion: Natalie Mayflower Sours Edwards

June 10, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

She Exposed the Truth About ‘Dirty Money’: It’s Everywhere By Mark Schoofs Mr. Schoofs is the editor in chief of BuzzFeed News and a visiting professor at the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California. Last Thursday, President Biden vowed to make global financial systems more transparent so that individuals … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Finanace, Politics Tagged: banks, corruption, crime, drug cartel funds, FinCEN Files, global finance, Investigative Journalists, money laundering, organized crime, pardon, terrorist financing, Treasury Department

Why are our cities built for 6ft-tall men?

May 19, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Over on the Guardian, a review of a retrospective on 80s design activists Matrix who, as the pull quote states: The female architects who fought back – Fed up living in a world designed by and for men, 80s design activists Matrix declared war on every urban obstacle in their way. And their impact is … [Read more…]

Posted in: Environment, Ethical and green living, Feminism, Future of Work, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about Tagged: childcare, children’s play area, community action, Design, designed environments, Feminist, Le Corbusier, Le Modulor, Matrix, Matrix Feminist Design Co-operative, participatory planning, public space, shared kitchen, squatting, Women, workers’ co-operatives
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