Cairo Divided: The Escape of the Elites.

middleeastrevised's avatarmiddle east revised

Jason Larkin is a photographer that keeps on “producing” great work. He is internationally recognised for his long-term social documentary projects, environmental portraiture and landscape reportage. For me, it’s mostly his work in and around Egypt that keeps me excited. He did a wonderful series Past Perfect, photographing the museums of Egypt. By deciding how the past is presented and memorialised, museums not only preserve the past, they also play an important role in the construction of our ideologies, identities and the understanding and interpretation of ourselve.  That is why Past Perfect was Larkin’s way of revealing one more layer of Egypt’s identity. In Suez: A Life Line, Larkin captures the importance of the Suez canal,  a 192 km passage dividing Africa from the Middle East and a crucial source of income and foreign exchange for Egypt. Larkin’s Egyptian project I wish to focus on today is Cairo Divided.

Artist…

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Ellen Lubic: Time for an Audit and Grand Jury Probe of Deasy in Los Angeles

dianeravitch's avatarDiane Ravitch's blog

Ellen Lubic, director of Joining Forces for Education and a professor of public policy in Los Angeles, here describes the numerous failings of Superintendent John Deasy and calls for an independent audit and grand jury investigation. The article has gone viral, receiving nearly 700,000 hits since it was published by CityWatch.

She writes:

“Finally the lack of transparency of the mismanaged leadership of LAUSD Superintendent John Deasy is seeing the light of day. The excellent investigative journalism by the LA Times education reporter, Howard Blume, and KPCC’s detailed and informed reporter, Annie Gilbertson, has opened up the stench of the secret deals and waste of taxpayer funds that Deasy manipulated throughout his tenure, and is now exposed for all to see.

“Many in the public were shocked that his contract was renewed last October after the $1 Billion iPad scandal was published not only in LA, but all over the…

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Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet: Enchanted in animation.

Gah, I wish I were in Canada right now. I was introduced to Kahlil Gibran by none other than Terry Kath, the late guitarest for the band Chicago. As I read about his life, I discovered that he loved the writings of Gibran, The Prophet.
Link here: http://www.katsandogz.com/gibran.html

middleeastrevised's avatarmiddle east revised

Inspired by the great classic by Kahlil Gibran, TheProphet is an animated feature film, with chapters from animation directors from around the world.

Gibran’s book is a collection of poetic essays that are philosophical, spiritual, and for almost a century since its first publication (1923) –  inspirational. Gibran’s musings are divided into twenty-eight chapters covering such sprawling topics as love, children, giving, eating and drinking, work, joy and sorrow, buying and selling, crime and punishment, freedom, reason and passion, pain, self-knowledge, teaching, friendship, good and evil, pleasure, beauty, religion, and death.

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Naturally, the animated version of such a classic comes as a big and exciting project. Director Roger Allers (The Lion King) assembled an array of internationally acclaimed animators to realize episodes from The Prophet, which are woven into the tale of a mischievous young girl (voiced by Beasts of the Southern Wild’s Quvenzhané Wallis) who…

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The face of minimum wage

Maria Fernandes died while sleeping in her car between work shifts.  She is the face of the minimum wage worker trying to make ends meet and have a little extra afterward.

 

 

(I’ve had a stupid migraine the past few days.  I thought I was going to go migraine-free this month. I started to get one last week, my usual time, but I stopped it with ibuprofen.  I was hoping that I had healed to the point that I could stop them with ibuprofen, which used to work for me.  But, alas…)

Senior US Centers for Disease Control Scientist Confirms Andrew Wakefield Was Right About MMR Causing Autism

ChildHealthSafety's avatar____________________Child Health Safety_________________

Celia Farber on The Truth Barrier has just published details of text messages from US Centers for Disease Control senior scientist Dr William Thompson for Dr Andrew Wakefield and to his wife in which Dr Thompson confirms Andrew Wakefield was right about MMR vaccine causing autistic conditions: BREAKING NEWS: CDC WHISTLEBLOWER TEXT MESSAGES TO ANDY WAKEFIELD: STUDY WOULD HAVE “SUPPORTED HIS SCIENTIFIC OPINION”September 2, 2014 By Celia Farber

In a message to Dr Andrew Wakefield’s wife Dr Thompson wrote:

I do believe your husbands career was unjustly damaged and this study would have supported his scientific opinion. Hopefully I can help repair it.”

To see the original messages in photographs from the phones of Dr Wakefield and his wife go to: BREAKING NEWS: CDC WHISTLEBLOWER TEXT MESSAGES TO ANDY WAKEFIELD: STUDY WOULD HAVE “SUPPORTED HIS SCIENTIFIC OPINION”September 2, 2014 By Celia Farber

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Making your own Calendula salve, tea, and oil

Farmer’s Almanac has a good piece up on using the healing plant, Calendula, for tea, oil, or salve.

Reasons to make your own?

–No added chemicals.

–Natural healing always trumps man-made because the body recognizes natural biological makeup and can utilize it.

–If you grow your own Calendula, you’re also giving back.  Because bees will use the pollen to make their honey and whatnot…and we all know what trouble the bees are in.  They need all the help they can get.

 

Cottage industries support community

A good piece on sustainability combined with economy. Too Big To Fails don’t want to hear this because it flies in the face of their practices of greed–they want it all.
Note the circle created by the farmer tending the sheep, the mills that make the wool into usable product, the crafs person making the wool into useful clothing…and on. Traditional roles would have the men raising the sheep with women creating the clothing…a benefit to both sexes. I just wanted to point out that women contributed, without much acknowledgement, throughout history in our very survival. Without warm clothing to sustain throughout cold winters, we would not have survived. Additionally, it was women who picked nuts, berries, and roots that also helped sustain humans–men were not that great of hunters back in the day….

earthstonestation's avatarearthstonestation

How can rural communities  advance the common goal of economic stability, healthy living and environmental stewardship?

Food, clothing and shelter are the necessities of human survival. These industries and the transportation of these goods also have the largest impact on the environment. These same industries also drive a good portion of the local economy as well as corporate economic growth.

Most countries use capitalism as a way of organizing the economy. The things that are used to grow, make and transport products are owned by individual people or a company rather than the government. The mid-18th century gave rise to industrial capitalism, made possible by the accumulation of vast amounts of capital under the mercantile phase of capitalism and its investment in machinery. Over the past two decades, Wall Street investors, boards of directors, financial analysts, even auditors and career politicians have all  collaborated in creating a new type of…

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Fighting for history: Uncovering the truth of residential schools

Another Catholic Church scandal–denying the indigenous their history and once again denying abuse victims. I cannot imagine the mind that would think it is okay to put a child in an electric chair!

Zig Zag's avatarWarrior Publications

Native children in Residential School. Native children in Residential School.

A report from the front lines of the search for “truth” in Truth and Reconciliation, and a look at the people trying to make history accessible to aboriginals and non-aboriginals alike.

WINNIPEG—There are two sacred boxes in the offices of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

One is a bentwood box sculpted from a single piece of cedar by an indigenous artist. Its panels are adorned with the mournful carved faces representing First Nations and Métis who suffered through the residential schools era, when government-sanctioned institutions systemically tried to eradicate indigenous culture, tore apart families and operated havens for child abuse.

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