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Extraordinary Discourse 040: The World Owes You A Living 3

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Extraordinary Discourse 040 Special: The World Owes You A Living 3 Workplace And Men Men And War Families, Roles Pictures of Rich and Poor Today's Extraordinary Discourse Special is Episode 3 of The World Owes You A Living suite, a 6-part Millennial Associational Documentary. A good look behind the mask of the job system and its supporting institutions and memes. Where do we go, men, from a war to a matrix of desks/suit jackets /coldwar defense contracts. Whence domestic violence, "managers"? Powerlessness. Child sexual abuse? Powerless predators. Soul unity, camaraderie of WWII grunts broken into the centrifugal entropia of consumer items for the wife and kids and TV and alcohol til death. Dr. William Temple, 98th Archbishop of Canterbury: "I am inclined to agree with the Biblical saying that work is a curse." Dedicated to the #Occupy movements around the planet. The World Owes You A Livin...

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Lots Of Audio Pocket Change Whose head is upon it? Yours, I hope. Lewis Carroll or Charles Dodgson was a mathematician who had become quite fascinated by non-Euclidean spaces and non-Euclidean geometries, and he has transferred those to the nursery world, but, in effect, created a very avant-garde and symbolist treatise by so doing. So our world beginning as early, in fact,  as Rimbaud, our whole environmental world electromagnetically moved into a world of discontinuity and disconnection and unique spaces rather than homogeneous spaces. Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Me But one of the hopeful things about the computer is this: that as a retrieval system, the instantaneous speed of retrieval by computer offers a future of discovery, because a retrieval system of very high speed brushes so many facets of knowledge together, so many kinds of layers of experience get brushed together that they reveal structures, they reveal forms, they reveal the life of forms, they revea...

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House of Excerpts On the other hand, if I count the number of hours I spend listening to the radio, I am glad that I don't have to buy a license for it, or pay by the hour. My radio is on nearly all the time at home. Someone once said 'You get better pictures on the radio.' and they were right. When I hear a drama or comedy programme, I create the faces, costumes, special effects and scenery myself. No television producer can create a different programme for each viewer. Radio Has The Best Pictures More important, we will search out the hidden connections among events that on the surface seem unrelated. Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave Actually, I'm getting a little sick of the word 'discourse.' Do I sound irritable? There is a very noisy playground across from where I am writing. Guest Editor Billy Collins Introduction best American poetry 2006

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Pathways Through a Medicine Forest Work hard!  Keep quiet! Drug the kids! A well-chosen anthology is a complete dispensary of medicine for the more common mental disorders, and may be used as much for prevention as cure. Robert Graves We shouldn't hesitate to pilfer the past for what it has to offer, the ancients lose nothing yet we are enriched. Bob Black

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Fractal Documentary For you if your head is also alive. This is how philosophy evolved in the symposium, before philosophy was written down. And poetry began with the voice as its only player and the ear as its only recorder. Indeed, I don’t know of any really good writer who was deaf, either. How could one ever come, even with the clever signage of the good Abbé de l’Épée, to appreciate the miniscule twinges and ecstasies of nuance that the well-tuned voice imparts? Cristopher Hitchens, June 2011 Making mental connections is our most crucial learning tool: the essence of human intelligence. To forge links, to go beyond the given, to see patterns, relationships, context. Marilyn Fergusen, The Aquarian Conspiracy Thinking that is alive involves seeing connections between seemingly different phenomena. Mary Daly Arthur Koestler has even gone so far as to argue... that jokes represent the primitive basis of creative thought, because they bring together ideas that a...

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Diversified utterance portfolio from Rumi to GLI. History teaches that when verbal taboos are broken, free discussion and changes for the better occur. Ralph Nader If They Give You Lined Paper, Write Sideways. Daniel Quinn

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Discourse Delicatessen For activists and introverts. I side with the Schlegels, with Nietzsche, Bataille, Jabes, and others, for whom the fragment is crucial to an understanding of contemporary life... Alan Sondheim Yet he was to spend much of the next two decades putting the facts he had been taught together again in a historical pattern of his own, and excoriating the academic system. What his complaint amounted to was this, that the system imparted the facts but had only a received and inert sense of the relations between the facts. These were dynamic relations, whereas syllabi are static affairs of language and period. Hugh Kenner, on Ezra Pound