RollingStone.com: A Polluter’s Feast : Politics

RollingStone.com: A Polluter’s Feast : Politics

Read the above linked article. Please.

There is one thing this author missed, but only because he published this a few days too soon…

Back in 2003, Mr. Bush, serving as our President, killed the higher Miles Per Gallon requirements for new cars in liew of some future shift to Hydrogen*.

Yesterday I saw a newspaper headline stating “Bush urges conserving fuel”. Where the hell was that attitude when he signed off on letting automobile manufacturers switch from “Miles Per Gallon” to “Gallons Per Mile”? How do you conserve fuel when you get 15 MPG in your brand new Ford Super Duty**.

-Chris

*He somehow thought automobile manufacturers could not work on two projects at the same time. Not everyone has his limitations. If he was right Ford wouldn’t be able to make a Sedan and a Pickup Truck at the same time. Automobile manufacturer R&D departments are working on dozens, if not HUNDREDS, of concurrent projects.

**I have no idea if this MPG is correct. The Ford website tells you specs, such as fuel tank capacity, but does not list the MPG for the Super Duty Truck.

Modern Age ‘Dome of Silence’

Ever since Mike Wilkes played me an MP3 in 1997 (or was in ’98?) I knew it was going to change the way I played music forever. Within two hours of having been introduced to the MP3 format I had read everything I could find on-line, purchased MusicMatch Jukebox (the only one of several rippers I tried that night that worked with my Asus CD drive) and I was ripping my CD collection to hard disk. When I ran out of drive space I ordered the parts to build a storage server with my first RAID. Even though I was one of those geeks who ordered one of the first ISO 9660 reading MP3 playing portable CD players off of Think Geek, I thought that the niche MP3 players that were available would never catch on with the masses. They were big, clunky, and had a certain level of geek skill required to load them with music. Every week or so Slashdot ran an article about a new portable MP3 player, but few ever made it to market. Geeks are a bad market to pitch. They crave more than they can afford and they want features that do not sell well to the folks at WallyWorld. (Although, is it too geeky to want a player that you can mount as a hard drive and just drag over files? Creative blew it in that regards.)

Apple brought MP3 to the masses, with the ease of use of the iPod and the abilities of iTunes. The design is simple, functional and elegant. It is a geek toy given a makeover so it appeals to the masses. The User Interface is minimalisticly slick and the device itself is sexy. There is no doubt that the iPod is a cool piece of technology.

It is the current ultimate tool of ‘Think Different’ individuality. No longer do you have to complain that there are no radio stations in your area that you like, you carry your own library of music and play lists. Your music, your quirky tastes; all privately listened to in your own musical paradise. With your iPod you carry your own personal auditory Universe.

This is, in my opinion, the iPod’s social failing. Part of being in your own Universe is walling others out. The iPod builds an audio wall between the wearer and their surroundings. In regards to normal human senses, audio is only superceded by visual in the amount of information it provides about a person’s environment. The primary form of personal communication employed by humans is vocal, and is pretty much negated when someone is wearing an iPod. Even with the audio turned low, earbuds and headphones interfere with hearing your surroundings. Then there are the cases of the people on BART whose music was hearable ten feet away; no point in trying to verbally communicate with them. Even in non-public environments, like in the office, I find that people wearing their ‘personal music systems’ are oblivious to greetings, questions, and sometimes even their phone ringing. In effect, they are cut off from their surroundings. I find myself not even making an effort to say hello to friends if I see those tell-tale white buds in their ears.

The iPod* celebrates Individuality while erecting barriers to Community, whether that Community is home, work or walking down the street. Community is something that I think our ‘modern’ culture lacks in significant ways, and I believe every bit of erosion hurts.

Has that stopped me from using my iPod? Not completely; but, I do moderate how I use it. I try not to use it at work, unless I have a need to shut out others (like project deadlines). I turn mine off as soon as I enter Peet’s Coffe, rather than waiting until I get to the counter. Like any tool, it can be used for good and for bad.

How are you using yours?

-Chris

* I don’t mean to pick on the iPod here. There were personal MP3 players before the iPod, and there will be more to come. Apple and the iPod made geeky MP3 files cool, and I think that in the not too distant future iPod will be as generic as Coke and Xerox in regards to similar products. It is in this way that I use iPod to inconsistently describe a class of devices.

Thoughts on my first Burning Man

If you spend any amount of time talking to a serious Dead Head about The Grateful Dead you will likely hear about the shows they attended, their favorite song, the times where they heard their favorite song, and some amount of band history. Dead Heads I have known were often fervent in their discussions about the band, wanting to share their particular insight into the Dead Head experience. One of the things that I felt when following the Dead was a sense of being connected to a community, and connected to the past. The Grateful Dead were one of the longest lived bands ever, and their accomplishments were incredible. If you heard a song played live that was played at the Pyramids in Egypt, you felt connected to that event even though you were not there. When they would play a rarely heard song the audience went wild; they knew how long since it was last performed, and felt connected in being there to hear it played after so long. The more you knew about the band, the more shows you had been to, the more you had experienced the more you belonged to something bigger than yourself. It didn’t take drugs to feel that sense of connection, but they certainly enhanced the group consciousness.

The Rainbow Gatherings established a similar feeling in me. It was a sense of community paired with a connection to a happier and simpler time. People would gather at the drum circle, volunteer at the communal kitchens, etc; and in doing so cement the feeling of community. The sense of group consciousness was stronger here, but so is the sense of interdependence. My first rainbow gathering was filled with so many happy coincidences that I found myself walking in a Shadow that defied statistical improbability. I felt home.

Burning Man shares many of these characteristics, but on steroids. The sense of community is incredibly strong, but not because you are dependant on each other like the communal kitchens at a rainbow gathering. Rather, it is because you stand alone against the harshness of the desert.; just like the person standing next to you. In a shared hardship you have kindred spirits. Unlike a Grateful Dead concert where everyone’s focus is the same, everyone at Burning Man comes to focus on something different. The group consciousness is more of a tapestry than a single thread. I also started off my first evening at Burning Man by walking right up to someone I had hoped to see there but who had assured me that it was too big of a place for us to ever see each other. That was the first of many happy coincidences there.

There is also a high level of embracing technology at Burning Man; not only to survive, but to create acts of high art and pure whim. Where Rainbow Gatherings and Grateful Dead shows feel like they were connecting me to the past, Burning Man was a brightly lit road to the future. I saw more electroluminescent wire at Burning Man than I had seen at all up until then, as well as Road Warrior style art cars, and even a giant robot with flamethrowers for arms (that worked!). Perhaps embracing is not the right word; how about ‘reveling in’? 🙂

Most people need community. They find it in their family, religion, clubs, jobs, etc; they find it in common interests, beliefs, tasks. It’s wired into our hindbrains. Man is a communal creature. Those same people who won’t look you in the eye while walking down the street, and who look away rather than return a smile, go home to their families or their clubs or their churches and feel safe in their controlled community.

Burning man gives you community, but challenges you in its diversity; as opposed to comfort in commonality. It is techno-geek paradise, even if you choose to live it simply. It is freedom like you have never felt before, and it is responsibility like you have never felt before. You take your life in your own hands going there, but you’ll be too inspired to create to notice how much effort you are putting into staying alive.

I have come back feeling more inspired than I have in several years. I have ideas for a multi-level geodesic dome for Haus Boheme BRC, a techno-mage staff made with EL wire, and even some ideas for an art car or two. Dusty and Danger have a lead on a bus for me, and the idea of tricking one out again really has me stoked. I have a lot to learn, and now I feel a reason to do so. I’ve already signed up for one class at The Crucible, and I wish Dan were here to teach me welding.

A friend of mine asked me what Burning Man was like. When I couldn’t find the words she got a little pissy, and told me that I didn’t need to treat her like she didn’t get it. She said that even though she had never been, it had been explained to her and she ‘got it’. I applaud her. I have only gone once. I have scratched only the surface. I can’t say that I ‘get it’ yet. But I will; even if it takes me a few decades, theme camps and art cars!

Ghostwheel of Black Rock City

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