Archive - 2008

Slaughterhouse-Five

Slaughterhouse-Five

author: Kurt Vonnegut

name: Steev

average rating: 3.99

book published: 1969

rating: 4

read at:

date added: 2008/03/21

shelves:

review:

Welcome to the Monkey House

Welcome to the Monkey House

author: Kurt Vonnegut

name: Steev

average rating: 4.05

book published: 1968

rating: 4

read at:

date added: 2008/03/21

shelves:

review:

Mother Night

Mother Night

author: Kurt Vonnegut

name: Steev

average rating: 4.07

book published: 1961

rating: 4

read at:

date added: 2008/03/21

shelves:

review:

The Illuminatus! Trilogy: The Eye in the Pyramid/The Golden Apple/Leviathan

The Illuminatus! Trilogy: The Eye in the Pyramid/The Golden Apple/Leviathan

author: Robert Joseph Shea

name: Steev

average rating: 4.04

book published: 1975

rating: 4

read at:

date added: 2008/03/21

shelves:

review:

The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman

The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman

author: Louis de Bernières

name: Steev

average rating: 4.10

book published: 1992

rating: 4

read at: 2008/03/01

date added: 03/20/08

shelves: fun, novels

review:

Semiotext (E) Sf

Semiotext (E) Sf

author: Bart Plantenga

name: Steev

average rating: 4.19

book published: 1991

rating: 4

read at:

date added: 03/20/08

shelves:

review:

Heading to East Coast for WTR

The war tax resistance documentary is taking me out of town again, for 9 whole days. I'll be flying to New York City tomorrow and we'll be shooting Sunday and Monday there, and then heading down to DC for the big anti-war demo there on Wednesday. Activists will be blocking the IRS building that morning, and all sorts of other things will be happening. Later in the week we'll head up to Western Mass. to talk to WTRs there.

I'm kind of tired of travelling so much, and i'm not looking forward to cold and snow out there just when it's starting to really be nice and warm here in Tucson... although a side effect of that is that the pollen count has been crazy high and my sinuses are under assault to an almost intolerable degree.. so in that sense it will be good to get away....

The Border: Good News in Texas, Bad News (x2) in Arizona

Well, the nice thing is that a judge in Texas slapped down Chertoff for not following the law and consulting with landowners before having Homeland Security try to force its way onto their property to build the border wall.

On the other hand, back here in Arizona 2 more fascist and racist things happened: a mistrial was declared in the murder case against border patrol agent Nicolas Corbett, who shot dead in the back an apprehended migrant who posed no threat to him. The jury couldn't decide after 3 days of delibration and so now it has to be tried all over again and meanwhile the asshole walks free.

And in the Arizona state legislature last week several anti-immigrant bills passed through their respective committees. All of the ones that had been introduced, in fact.

But hey, more good news, Chertoff says that on the white border, err, I mean, the Canadian border, there won't be a wall, just another broken high-tech cyber fence, like the brilliant $15 million boondoggle that Boeing scammed the feds on here in Southern Arizona, which even McCain is calling "a disgrace."

Meanwhile unknown parties on bicycles are blowing up army recruiter stations in Times Square and not getting caught. I feel so damn safe I can hardly stand it, Michael. You're doing a heckuva job.

Turtle Island

I'm getting increasingly tired of people using the name "Turtle Island" without, in my view, really understanding it. Activists, new agers, poets, etc have been using it to be another name for the North American continent, in an effort to get away from using names invented by the white colonizers, ever since Gary Snyder published a book of poetry by that name. I guess it's somewhat debatable, but here's my point: the idea comes from the common Native American cosmovision that all the world is perched on the back of a giant turtle. One might argue that it refers to just this continent because they weren't aware of any other continents, but if there were there would be Deer Island and Whale Island and whatever else besides Turtle Island. But the point is that it's a cosmological, not geographic, worldview - they believed this continent was the entire world, was all there was for humans and other animals to live on. Therefore, I think you're really being too specific if you refer to North America as "Turtle Island." The whole world is Turtle Island.

I admit that it is ambiguous though. Here's part of a version of the myth:

Nanaboozhoo took the piece of Earth from Muskrat's paw. Just then, the turtle swam forward and said, "Use my back to bear the weight of this piece of Earth. With the help of Kitchi-Manitou, we can make a new Earth." Nanaboozhoo put the piece of Earth on the turtle's back. Suddenly, the wind blew from each of the Four Directions, The tiny piece of Earth on the turtle's back began to grow. It grew and grew and grew until it formed a mi-ni-si', or island in the water. The island grew larger and larger, but still the turtle bore the weight of the Earth on his back. Nanaboozhoo and the animals all sang and danced in a widening circle on the growing island. After a while, the Four Winds ceased to blow and the waters became still. A huge island sat in the middle of the water

So, is it "a new Earth", or is it just "an island" that is part of the Earth? Maybe a European, over-rational mind just can't make sense of it.

Enviro Border Vid Project Progressing

Here's a photo of me in the Lower Rio Grande River Valley shooting an interview for the project I'm doing for the Sierra Club on the environmental impacts of border infrastructure.
steev interviewing Sue Sill - 1
The project is really coming along. I just got back from another interview with a biologist here in Tucson, just a few blocks away from my house. It's funny that I've been from the Gulf to the Pacific on this project and also working right in my neighborhood.