Saturday, August 13, 2022

Mick Lynch: ‘It’s No Good Being Pissed Off – We Need Organisation’

 Time is a kind friend, he will make us old.

— Sara Teasdale, born in 1884

When the winds of change blow,

some people build walls,

and others build windmills



20 Best Jewish Delis In The US Tasting Table News you can use!



Locusts Can Smell Cancer, And It Could Give Us a Brilliant New Way to Save Lives Science Alert 


Documenting the toilets of the Alps


Good mate Peter Corijn, aka Paul Numi is at it again.  Channeling Bryan Adams and Sting:

 

“If truth be told I’m getting old,

I can’t make it on my own.”

 

Check it out on YouTube: 



Mick Lynch: ‘It’s No Good Being Pissed Off – We Need Organisation’ Tribune

A literary magazine editor shares what she's learned. E.g., "literary magazines do not enjoy the same audience as literary books."


Another way to explore YouTube: through phrases used repeatedly in TV and film.


I’D RATHER LAUGH WITH THE SINNERS THAN CRY WITH THE SAINTS, THE SINNERS ARE MUCH MORE FUN:  Jesus would have hung out in a dive bar—and not just to convert its patrons.

But one of the things that non-Christians — and for that matter all too many Christians — make is, that from Jesus’s perspective even the saints are sinners. You can’t reach Heaven through your own goodness; original sin — which is perhaps best understood as being like a kind of hereditary disease — means that by virtue of being human you’re unworthy of Heaven no matter what you do. Only divine grace can get you in the door. “In Adam’s fall, we sinned all,” and that includes the saints. (Though presumably they get a leg up on the divine grace front). Humans want to rank themselves in terms of goodness, because humans by nature want to rank themselves against other humans. Those differences are less significant to God.

Yeah, my first cousin is a bishop. How could you tell?


THERE’S BIG DEMAND FOR SOMETHING THAT “FEELS LIKE RELIGION” BUT WON’T MAKE PEOPLE FEEL GUILTY FOR DOING WHATEVER THEY WANT:  “You know, there are women who seek God and women who seek cold water. And you can be a seeker of cold water in a way that feels like religion.”



The book arcade Around the end of the 19th century, Melbourne, Australia, hosted one of the biggest – and certainly the most carnivalesque – bookstores in the world: Cole’s Book Arcade



Ruins of a life

Some more architectural insights: an interview with Eyal Weizman of Forensic Architecture / reviewing the writings of Mark Fisher / reviewing the life of Mike Davis / more Neom-related ragings:  Line in the Sand, Head in the Clouds (‘Am I in a Martian colony or in Hudson Yards?’). But what a ruin it would make / related, a visit to Canada’s 1980s ghost townKitsaultin British Columbia / elsewhere, Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique.

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Why are there so many bikes in the water? Time for some magnet fishing / The NRA Children’s Museum, an installation / photography projects by Richard Barnes / the ultimate what-if: ‘Missing hard drive could fund Newport crypto hub‘. That ‘could’ is doing a lot of work / how the Soviets retro-engineered the B-29 / What to do with a crumbling church, New York edition / the Archives for the Unexplained / Bad Moon Rising, EVOL, and Sister: Sonic Youth’s dark American trilogy / an Atari in Lego.

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A farewell to Bernard CribbinsDangerous Davies, not his finest moment (in a career of very fine moments), but fun nonetheless / musical objects from Yamaha Design Laboratory / Emotional Heritage, blue plaques for the quotidian moment (via b3ta) / also via bNotable People, a globe populated entirely by Wikipedia biographies / The Software That Changed Architecture: Reflecting on 40 Years of AutoCAD. See also the evolution of AutoCAD / cars photographed glossily by Olgun Kordal / architectural design by Matsys / paintings by Robert Newton / still enjoying Harry Dwyer’s 1,700 miles in a tiny speedboat series, a circumnavigation of the British Isles.