So, would you believe the Dalai Lama and George W. Bush hanging together? It happenned.
W. went on to China where he told their leaders that the DL didn't want Tibet's sovereignty.
Do you think W. felt like he was talking to Jesus? OR Did he think that The Dalai Lama was a charlatan? Does W. really support Tibetan Buddhism? How does he reconcile that with his belief in JESUS? And his support for democracy, "no eloctorate chose his holiness".....
story:
http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?article=Bush+Asks+China+to+Invite+the+Dalai+Lama&id=11272
World Peace Herald
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?StoryID=20051110-042642-5562r
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Thursday, November 17, 2005
The Poet and The Painter
Poetry Painting, the movie that Jamey Austin and I made in 2003 is now online. Search video.google.com for "poet painter".
At left is the piece from session six. The only one that he and I actually both went hands on with a painting. Note our signatures in the bottom left.
(BTW, I never put any words in his poetry. Though I did catch some great shots of his mad skills at writing straight without stopping).
For more details on "The Poet and The Painter".
http://funkyenough.com/classic_funk/poetpainter.htm
To watch The Poet and The Painter:
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=poet+painter&page=1&lv=1
Thursday, November 10, 2005
"We Are All Witnesses": Lebron
Nike has posted a ten story high billboard of King James AKA Lebron James, the next coming of Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. The slogan, "We are all witnesses" refers to the unique opportunity of watching the birth of a legend.
From this photo, I thought that the American flag and others (anyone recognize the other two?) were part of the billboard. What is Nike doing? Are they referencing our collective responsibility for what America is doing around the globe?
We are all "witnesses" and complicit to the loss of individual liberties and the anti-American sentiment in the world. So many people I know are still in shock that Bush got re-elected and are exhausted over it.
David Brooks in todays NY Times column about the recent riots in France:
One of the striking things about the scenes from France is how thoroughly the rioters have assimilated hip-hop and rap culture. It's not only that they use the same hand gestures as American rappers, wear the same clothes and necklaces, play the same video games, and sit with the same sorts of car stereos at full blast. It's that they seem to have adopted the same poses of exaggerated manhood, the same attitudes about women, money and the police.
America's rebellious countercultural heroes exert more influence around the world than the clean establishment images from Disney and McDonald's. This is our final insult to the anti-Americans; we define how to be anti-American, and the foreigners who attack us are reduced to borrowing our own clichés.
Sorry, I just think it's important to note:
- Hip-hop is not all about Gangsta. That is one of the most annoying misnomers for me-- when I meet someone who assumes all rap and hip-hop are misogynistic, violent, etc.
- Americans often forget how influential our counter-culture is. We still define what is hip and cool in the world. More specifically, I would offer the over-generalization that it is Black America that still decides what is cool.
- Being anti-american is different than being anti-US government... the second of those has been a message from much conscious hip-hop: Public Enemy, Poor Righteous Teachers, Paris, X-Clan...
Tuesday, November 08, 2005
R.I.P. breathingSPACE
Oaklandish, the grassroots organization in downtown Oakland has lost it's building and is transforming itself into a solid internet community builder. I just posted a link to the warehouse which I left exactly one year ago.
RIP breathingSPACE: props to
Matome, Roib, Krissy, Gideon, Aubry, Colin, Thilivhali, Shaka, Adimu, Saran, Kelly, Gillian, Nicko Blue, Ethan and some G's...
The forum on Oaklandish is great, check it out.
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