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Filltering through the murky water to highlight what most people sent to page two.

Archive for June, 2006

Trips and tripping

June 22, 2006 | 3 Comments | Uncategorized

I’m off to Germany for two weeks. Miss me please!

Popularity: 6% [?]

I’m sorry to cut and paste a block of someone else’s writing, but in the Seattle Weekly this week, there’s an excellent piece by Roger Downey discussing his separation from the events and celebrations of Seattle’s Gay Pride weekend, which is about to take place in Seattle. Having just seen Brokeback Mountain – yes, rather late – he sees the film from a different perspective from many people who criticised it and who loved it. He thought it was largely about poverty and class, and how being poor in rural America massively reduces your chances at sexual liberation. Long before the time of the events pictured in the film men and women of sexual minority groups were finding companionship with one another in major cities like San Francisco and Miami. By urbanising and grouping together they were strong. But it was and still is those gays and lesbians who are caught in the rural states, in areas detached from support mechanisms, that need help and still need our help. Downey says Pride is now more about celebrating how great we are and what we’ve got rather than what we have achieved. It was those that came before us that made today’s ‘tolerance’ if not acceptance possible. Now we have to do something to be proud of, help those minority groups and racial minorities who aren’t educated in the language of sexual politics to liberate those members of their communities who are still hiding.

I’ve been feeling more and more remote from the events of Gay Pride for years, but seeing Brokeback Mountain, even if I saw it differently than most, got me thinking hard again about what it’s for, about just what it is that’s being celebrated. Pride? Proud of what? Proud of our “difference”? Proud of our struggle to overcome fear, intimidation, and opposition? Twenty years ago, even 10, I could go along with that. But when I look at the Pride marchers today, if I see anything more than a sort of multicolored St. Patrick’s Day celebration, I see people celebrating being, on average, the most privileged people on planet Earth, free to do exactly as they please, absolved even of the implied injunction on heterosexuals to reproduce, to foster their offspring, to devote the best years of their lives and much of their income to providing for the next generation. I’m not saying that’s not cause for celebration. I enjoy the same privileges as they. What I don’t understand is why we call it “Pride,” and why the hets are willing to let us disrupt traffic with our boasting.

Seattle Weekly: The End of Pride

Popularity: 1% [?]

Have cars got really big?

June 18, 2006 | No Comments | Uncategorized

Or is it just that Christina Aguilera is kind of small nowadays?

christina aguilera and a BIG car

via The Superficial

Popularity: unranked [?]

Firefox Viral Ad Mocks Other Browsers

June 18, 2006 | No Comments | Uncategorized

Anthropomorphizing the icons of today’s ‘popular’ web browsers (Netscape?!), the viral video pokes fun at Firefox’s competitors without actually showing how it’s better than the rest. It’s an ad for those who already love it: Firefox is all about the browser just working, not much else…

via TUAW.com

Popularity: unranked [?]

Scott Adams’ Readers’ Stories

June 17, 2006 | No Comments | Uncategorized

Scott Adams is the creator of the Dilbert comic strip. He’s a guy who managed to hold down a steady job in the corporate world for six years whilst drawing his comic every day before work, and perhaps part of that whacky nature of not giving up has spilled into his blog which you can get to from dilbert.com, but is really found at dilbertblog.typepad.com. He posted some information about true events that have happened to him, being held at gunpoint four times and being mugged in other ways as well: it doesn’t give San Francisco in the 80’s a very good sell.
Anyway. The stories from readers are hilarious, starting with the knockout first one, from ‘Sheilah’:

I once pushed an ENTIRE HUMAN BEING out of my vagina.

He’s bigger now.

Popularity: unranked [?]

Sometimes I really dislike Japan

June 17, 2006 | 3 Comments | Uncategorized

They just don’t seem to get it! A lot of people don’t like the idea of killing, for ’scientific purposes’, the largest mammals on Earth: whales. The only scientific study I could imagine would be to see how many they can kill before they don’t recover.

David Attenborough has previous said:

…If whales could scream the industry would stop, for nobody would be able to stand it.

Then they give money to poor Caribbean nations for ‘fishing aid’. What is this, so that these countries create over-developed fishing industries that will be just outraged by the impact of whales eating their fish? It’s so false and underhand and just disgusts me. Can’t we show repeats of The Blue Planet on Japanese television continually until they beg us to stop and repent their horrible crimes. Japan and Norway’s tolls: 2,500 whales killed in the last twelve months. It’s disgusting.

WaPo: Pro-Whaling Nations Lose Early Vote
Guardian: Japan hits out at ‘polarised’ whaling council

Popularity: 6% [?]

It’s so true.

June 13, 2006 | 1 Comments | Uncategorized

Stepping out, everyone can see my face
All the things I can’t erase from my life
Everybody knows
Standing out so you won’t forget my name
That’s the way we play this game of life
Everybody knows

-Dixie Chicks: Everybody Knows

Popularity: 2% [?]

Thanks to the internet, I think for the first time young people are seeing history made before it is censored by their elders. It’s such a powerful thing that we can create our own history, see the news unfold in real-time and contribute our own information and thoughts to unfolding stories before they are stymied by those that would like a more agreeable daily roundup.

Popularity: unranked [?]

from SFPride.org:

Unlike other Grand Marshal positions, the Lifetime Achievement Grand Marshal is not necessarily an annual award and is bestowed only when the appropriate occasion arises. This award is given to a person who has dedicated years of service and activism toward the LGBT community throughout the course of their lifetime. This year, Pride is recognizing a person who has given much of his time and activism to supporting the Transgender community, especially in the wake of the riots at Gene Compton’s Cafeteria in 1966, but whose support for the LGBT community reaches back into the early sixties.

Sgt Elliot Backstone

On a related note, the ads on the SFPride website are just too funny. The catchlines are just too tongue in cheek:

  • LOGO (tv network): ‘Say you want it’
  • Delta (Airlines): go anywhere. anything goes.
  • San Francisco Chronicle: We Come Out Every Day
  • Comcast (ISP): Hook Up. Fast.

    Popularity: unranked [?]

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