One Big Conversation: Rage Against The Machine Christmas Number One

Rage Against The Machine have claimed the UK Christmas chart number one thanks to a grass roots campaign highlighting disenchantment with how much music is promoted and marketed. This is water cooler stuff, at work, at home, on the bus, it’s something to share and chuckle about.

So. It prompts a question.

When was the last time our flavour of the week was a group of revolutionary, pro-Zapatista, pro-Black Panther, pro-Shining Path, bank-hating rockers, who have been shut down, forcibly removed, and arrested for taking action through music and more direct means?

A while, no?

So. This is our Christmas gift for a shitty year.

This is the opener for a dozen heated conversations to open up some minds.

I’m choosing to get excited about this, and invite you all to get excited along with me. If you’re in for the ride. Wrest the world back onto the right orbit, through individual talk, thought and action. Not as easy as downloading a song, but a hell of a lot more satisfying.

The focus is on the song, so what about the song?

No need to get complicated: Killing in the Name is about bucking control systems, pure and simple. It focuses on institutional racism in security agencies, but this isn’t where it’s at for me. What feels timely is the failure of a meaningful accord at Copenhagen, and the gathering voices for direct action that have followed in its wake. Action against corporations or the state and for the people and our futures. If you think these ideas fall outside the mainstream, think again.
If this makes you want to do something – and it should! – one place you could start is
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/

What else? A lot else. I’ll pick just one thing out that inspires me, beyond which I recommend you check out wikipedia or the band site and see what stimulates you. Be incredible, organic and grassroots.

So.

Food security

RATM members supported South Central Farm in LA. People worked as a community to grow their own food, enhancing local economies and making themselves more resilient and self sufficient. They were eventually forced out by a businessman with a claim: now, it’s to be a car park.

In a future where energy will be costlier and industrial outputs must be downscaled, this is exactly backwards. Experts agree.

They haven’t lost the fight, having sourced land to continue production.

http://www.southcentralfarmers.com/

But no question, it is a fight: the powers that be are still after their car parks. We need to change that. And no doubt, this is a problem for us too. And we need to be even more inventive with how to DIY, as 70 hectares of land comes even less easy on this small island.

Here in South London, this is where I would look for more info and things to do

http://www.projectdirt.com/


More broadly, loads of good stuff is going on here:
http://www.transitiontowns.org/

Remember, groove-rocking chart toppers care about community vegetable plots, so why the hell can’t you?

According to the band, anger is a gift. It’s true. And so is this, right here, a gift that was never meant to have grander consequences than denting the ego of a man with a mansion.

Talk, furiously talk this week. Reflect the next. Come January, act. Let’s do this.

Birthday update

Resurrected for a day!

Nice.

Um, birthday plans are looking ropey, due to the weather. The contingency plan is the following:

1. Arrive at my place from 12.30 onwards. Still bring picnicky stuff, we will do an indoor picnic and other fun stuff.

2. At some point, we may then stretch our legs out to a nearby pub, probably The White Horse on Brixton Hill around the corner.

I will confirm on-blog and on Facebook later today….

More in a Series of Fortunate Events

Today was a landmark day, a little sad; I said goodbye to my research unit and my position as a postdoc. The place and people prised their way into my heart and, unlike many of their patients, I will never forget them.

But every event has its echo, and this one carries backward – to an interview and offer last month – and forward, to a new job in the new year. More details as I get them, loyal readers.

Tomorrow is also a landmark day; we move into a house that we own.

The day after is Christmas Eve (you might know that one), with all the busyment that follows.

All in all, 2006 is making a big exit.

Speak in… 07?

A rant on progressive social programs

Not mine, but a quote I mined:

It might be right to say that the “true” cause of poverty and lack of life chances is ignorance, malnutrition, antisocial behaviour etc, but as Chris Dillow often says, you don’t cure a pedestrian with a broken leg by sending the bus backwards over him.

From the comments to this provoking post.

Mad tidings we bring?

Something to do with the combination of dark nights, fairy lights, jingly sleigh-bell music and heavy-rotation advertising going on in the background means there’s a palpable whiff of greasy hysteria in the air. A feeling that everything’s about to shut down and hibernate, so you’ve got to get your oar in now while there’s still time. It’s all bells and tinsel and unhinged grinning urgency. No wonder Die Hard was set at Christmas. Watching Bruce Willis crashing through windows and machine-gunning terrorists would have seemed downright boring if he’d been doing it on pancake day.

Charlie Brooker at Comment is Free

I will pay to do your work for you.

Speaker: Luis von Ahn is an assistant professor in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University.
Snippet of Abstract: “Tasks like image recognition are trivial for humans, but continue to challenge even the most sophisticated computer programs. This talk introduces a paradigm for utilizing human processing power to solve problems that computers cannot yet solve. Traditional approaches to solving such problems focus on improving software. I advocate a novel approach: constructively channel human brainpower using computer games.”
Awesomeness: Pretty awesome.

Overhead online

On whether university economics skews you politically rightwards:

I never was taught basic economics (Latin and Greek were thought to be much more useful), but the logic of a rightward shift seems pretty straightforward to me.

First, you are taught how to conjugate a verb. That would be Latin 101.

Metella est mater. Quintis est filius et ambulat in hortum. Hic, haec, hoc. (This is all I can remember)

Then you spend the next 5 years learning all the 20,000 exceptions to the rule. That would be real Latin.

Similarly, Econ 101 is for libertarians, while economy is for, huh, real economists. The libertarians never get past the Esperanto-like first grade version of Latin.

They only learn the first bit: how markets work. They never get round to the second, far more frustrating bit: markets don’t work all the time, and can indeed fail disastrously. The invisible hand often needs guidance.

Jasper Emmering at Crooked Timber.