In Defense of Anagorism

political economy in the non-market, non-state sector

Category: Uncategorized

  • Ceramics, in relationship to commercial art, art education and more.

    I have recently been strugglin’ with questions about fair use. One
    thing that has piqued that interest in recent weeks has been my
    discovery of barcode wikia. Go look it up…learning new markup
    languages is a slow process for Netizen Lorraine. Anyway, much of my
    internal ethical struggle has centered around what some term
    `derivative works.’ Roughly speaking, these are what happens when
    original content collides with unoriginal concepts.

    Obviously, the most openly derivative of creative pursuits has got to
    be advertising. I reminded myself of this recently by diving into my
    collection of VHS� tapes (I’m a vagrant netizen in multiple
    ways…) and re-watching the 2004 US Open (golf, not tennis). At
    some level, this violates my own conscience, no so much in my belief
    that people somehow violate the intellectual property of others by
    taping stuff off the television airwaves, but more by the guilt over
    using such exotic (by the austere expectations of the vagrant netizen)
    technologies as VHS�-licensed media and machines, which offer
    capabilities beyond the most utopian fantasies of literally hundreds
    of generations of samizdateli for something as mundane as men’s
    professional golf interlaced with numerous golfomercials. I mean,
    even if I never get around tuit and `re-constitute’ that setup I once
    had rigged between our VHS� VCR and our modified Minolta�
    video camera with the formerly proprietary handy-dandy electrical
    interface to both the 12VDC power supply and the composite A/V signal
    lines of the Minolta� portable VCR which unfortunately suppliable
    at the gar(b)age sale where we had bought the camera. For a few
    precious months I actually had live action montage capability,
    although it was a very dim and lo-res one as there seems to be
    something wrong, at some level, with the camera. To make a long story
    at least a little bit shorter, the untimely death of our other VCR
    necessitated unplugging our surviving VCR from the breadboard and
    enlist it in the dreary work of taping stuff off the free (as in beer)
    airwaves. When one is in love, one gladly makes such sacrifices.

    Anyway, this was supposed to be about `derivative work,’ whatever that
    might be. What triggered it was seeing a 2+ year old golfomercial. I
    distinctly remember the ‘mercial from back then, but had forgotten
    whose advertising campaign it was. Re-watching the 2004 USGAMO
    reminded me that the advertiser in question was Lexus�. It was
    about a wintersports enthusiast and occasional hitchhiker who was
    discussing with his companion his interest (an academic interest, no
    less) in ceramics. The punch line of the golvert had something to do
    with minoring rather than majoring in ceramics.

    A (seemingly) more recent incarnation of the witty deployment of the
    concept of a `ceramics major’ as a concept in advertising is a recent
    radio advertising insertion bankrolled by or for the National
    Fatherhood Initiative. It’s part of their `be a dad’ campaign and
    implores the audience “have you been a dad today?” The NFI blitz
    describes many ways in which people[?] can earn their dadhood, at
    least for a day. One is by driving home the point that a dad worthy
    of the job title will evaluate investments in the education of his
    offspring based primarily on direct applicability to careerism. In
    this respect, in creative terms, the NFI advomercial is lifted
    directly (and pretty much `whole cloth’) from the Lexus�
    golfomerical.

    It must be emphasized that I am in no way accusing NFI or its agents
    of any kind of wrongdoing. I simply found one of their many ads to be
    an amusing case study in the recycling of advertising gimmicks.
    Another interesting case study involves Daimler und Chrysler… not
    the present-day business resulting from the merger of DaimlerBends and
    Chrysler, but the separate entities that existed prior to the vaunted
    merger of equals. Shortly before the merger a Dodge� commercial
    recyled Mercedes�’ cute (the first time) inclusion of rhinoceri
    (or rhinoceroses) in a car commercial, the beasts in both cases
    serving as an example of what’s out there, traffic-wise.

    Keep the aspidistra flying!
  • =Blogger Lorraine=

    I finally got a round tuit and wrote a post for my Blogger account.
    Perhaps it will be the first of many and perhaps it will be the only
    one for some time. Since blogging has gotten a reputation for
    opinionation, I’ll use the present message for the purpose of
    clarifying my opinion system. In this context, opinion system
    is to opinion as belief system is to belief.

    It is my belief/opinion that belief and opinion are simply two words
    denoting the same thing. Henceforth in the present message I shall
    use the terms interchangeably, and probably use “opinion” more often,
    since it generally connotes less gravitas and therefore should be more
    accessible and less intimidating to others.

    While I don’t generally endorse the idea of America’s “Founding
    Fathers” as inerrant or otherwise uniquely qualified to set the human
    rights or legal reform agenda of American or other people on a
    “forever” basis, I do generally admire their ideas and the expression
    of those ideas in some of their most well-known documents. One true
    stroke of genius in the Bill of Rights is the first amendment. I
    myself would have worded the part about freedom of religion more
    explicitly, perhaps stating “wall of separation” instead of the
    seemingly deliberately contentious “nonestablishment clause.”
    Nevertheless, perhaps one can forgive the 18th century bourgeoisie for
    using stilted 18th century language. The real stroke of genius in the
    American Constitution is the devotion of one amendment (not more, not
    less) to (in essence) “freedom of belief/opinion.” While the present
    generation is torn end-to-end on whether the relationship between
    church and state is characterized by “non-establishment” or (as I
    would strongly prefer) a “wall of separation,” at least we aren’t
    plagued by controversies over whether a given exercise of (expletive
    deleted) authority is unconstitutional on mth amendment grounds
    (for violating “freedom of religion”) or nth amendment grounds
    (because people are entitled to their opinions).

    I have decided that the present blog will be yet another opinion blog.
    This is, of course, not because the world needs another opinion blog.
    It is probably the same reason “opinion” and “blog” are largely
    synonymous in much of the blogosphere:

    * I need a “containment bucket” to contain my opinions, so that other
    online resources that I use for samizdat (or samizdat lite) purposes
    will contain less opinion and be less opinionated.

    * Being naturally vain, I like having a modest informational space
    (thank you Blogger) where I can map out my constellation of opinions
    for comparison and contrast with other maps, many of which are well
    established online and especially in the blogosphere.

    Readers, if any, will hopefully forgive my amateurish and sometimes
    jarring text formatting. I am a vagrant netizen, so simply learning
    yet another interactive web site’s markup language can take multiple
    library visits, which can amount to more than a month in meattime.

    Keep the aspidistra flying!
  • Much (perhaps too much) has been posted online concerning what I
    shall refer to as “opinion taxonomy,” or perhaps more ominously
    “ideology taxonomy” or “agenda taxonomy.” I shall start here
    with a brief summary:

    * Left vs. right

    This is the most familiar, and probably also the most derided for
    oversimplification. I happen to endorse it, partially for its
    simplicity, but mostly for its solid consistency with life as I have
    observed it so far. It seems that in every context there are insiders
    and outsiders, overlords and underdogs, winning and losing track
    records. It also seems that every status quo (statist or
    otherwise) comes with its own tamper-proofing mechanisms designed to
    protect the interests of insiders, overlords and winners from
    outsiders, underdogs and losers.

    * High-dimensional euclidean space

    The most famous example is the biaxial Nolan Chart. Another is the
    triaxial Pournelle Chart. A somewhat long-winded discussion of the
    concept is found in the Wikipedia article “Political spectrum:”

    * Chromatic factionalism

    I first came across this on a European wiki (or tiki?) but have since
    failed to “re-locate” it. This offers some flexibilities in that one
    can mix and match factions, as in my own self identification with both
    the red (egalitarian) and black (antiauthoritarian) factions. I have
    proposed a “model agnostic” (though computationally intensive)
    approach to factionalism in my blurt titled “Chromatic Content Coding”
    at halfbakery.com:

    http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/Chromatic_20Content_20Coding#1141759425

    Halfbakery seems to have shuffled its namespace schema (or “dongling
    schema” as I call them), so the above URL might not work as is.

    * Percentage-based schemata

    This is the preferred approach of many American special interest
    groups (SIG’s). It consists of rating policymakers (at least
    legislative branch policymakers) on a scale of 0-100%. The percentage
    often represents simply the percentage of times a given politician
    voted the same way a given SIG would, given a seat in the legislature.
    Sometimes it is perhaps a weighted average. Not all SIG’s are
    transparent about precisely which bills are included for “analysis.”
    This approach to taxonomy can lead to absurdities such as David Brooks
    (7 Jul 2006 “News Hour,” PBS) classifying Joe Lieberman as some kind
    of überliberal thanks to a 0% rating by Christian Coalition.

    Keep the aspidistra flying!
  • Un anade cojo es un alimento muy completo.

    Keep the aspidistra flying!