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Archive for the 'Historica' Category

Evolution of Work

historica_selling_slaves

Compared to most animals we humans have developed a huge variety of jobs. First we started out as simple hunter-gatherers with only a specialization between genders. But as our mental capabilities grew - so did the job market.

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Since we are lazy creatures we tried to find methods to make life easier and work less. Technology and machines are the result of this - sadly slavery and feudal systems as well.

Until the industrial revolutions everything was handmade - machines played only a limited role for example in irrigation, mills and building. That all changed with the steam engine.

But in early stages of industrialization life & work was still harsh and deadly.

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World War II laid the foundation for a different global economy after colonialism and the coming information age.

Overall work (and life) got a lot easier for most humans. We even invented holidays - a very modern social gimmick that would be astonishing to Egyptian slaves or medieval peasants.

Even more amazing is our range of jobs: some people get huge amounts of money for hitting small balls with sticks, some very few navigate machines thru the sky and some others simply for listening to other people’s problems.

Amazing, don’t you think?

orangeguru (10-11 6:45) | No Comments | Permalink
Rice

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Rice is one of the major food sources of the world - although it is hard work to cultivate. Rice terraces need loads if water and attention. And most of it is still done manually (now for over 8.000 years!) - very different to potatoes or wheat.

Some of these rice terraces are just beautifully build into the landscape. Something we in German would call ‘Kulturlandschaft’.

More about rice on Wikipedia

orangeguru (10-09 3:15) | No Comments | Permalink
Nails

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One of our most basic building blocks of our modern culture today. Nails have been around for a long time (the romans already used them), but many cultures have developed building technologies without nails - especially were iron was not easy to find.

orangeguru (10-09 3:06) | No Comments | Permalink
Wrath of the Furies

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The furies are the manifestation of female vengeance - thank you very much, but I had a girlfriend once myself. And the poor Orestes (son of Agamemnon) is chased by them - just because he avenged his father’s death.

Those Greeks have been very unlucky … sometimes …

orangeguru (10-08 17:44) | No Comments | Permalink
Happy Anniversary: German Reunification 3. October 1990

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Soon it will be twenty years that the war ended for the two Germanys. East and West become one again. Today is a public holiday celebrating the big event.

But is Germany reunited?

No. Huge amounts of money have been spent to bring east Germany up to western standards. The infrastructure has been updated to world class levels. But the economy is simply not speeding up. East Germans have been leaving their homes in droves (1,3 million) for the golden west - while the golden west is loosing it’s shine, because all the money for infrastructure went to the east. Public funds and people went in different directions. The effect was pretty stupefying.

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Chancellor Helmut Kohl promised east Germans they would be as fat and loaded as he was …

Today east Germany mass unemployment, unhappiness and depression rule the land. Neo Nazis and old communist found fertile grounds for their ideas. Both parties got seats in local parliaments. Plus there is growing hostility towards foreigners. Again and again brown or black people have been beaten up on the streets. Is Fascism rising again? Not really, these are just underprivileged people trying to find someone to blame and beat up - while the rest of the brave citizens wallow in innocent ignorance.

But the whole country is still under an extra tax burden to still finance the cost of reunification. More money to waste. Politicians and companies have filled their coffers with shady deals and subsidies. The usual. most east German states are already in debt, because is irresponsible spending. So much about German planing and precision.

Germany is still bugged down by the cost of reunification, the economy and the people are slowly coping with the effects of globalization as well. All social programs have been cut down pretty harsh, very similar to Britain during the Thatcher years.

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Hair density equals amount of brain cells.

German culture is built on steadfastness and mutual consensus - not exactly qualities you need for global competition. Germany has to learn to be more flexible, fast, creative and aggressive.

We still have good educated work force and good engineers, but Germany has dangerously neglected it’s education system. PISA has repeatedly given Germany some of the worst scores for European countries. That is a national shame. But for years now there has only been talk, talk and even more talk. The school system is regulated by each state, which has created a chaos over the last forty years: some states do not recognize other states diplomas. You would thing that an knowledge society like Germany would be smart enough to develop a good national education system? Nah …

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We are better at developing weapons than putting many troops in the field. The German Bundeswehr hardly scares anyone these days - maybe except Liechtenstein …

The new Germany has shed of it’s historical restraints. We have sent troops to Kosovo and Afghanistan. Germany always spent a lot of money on international support and development. Our politicians would love to have a permanent seat at the UN, while the average Teutone doesn’t really care. Plus our military budgets is still shrinking, so our few soldiers here and there are hardly equipped with the right stuff to do any serious fighting. But we are pretty decent in rebuilding stuff - like we do in Afghanistan.

Our dreams of power are long over, all we want to be is to be good Europeans - fly somewhere for a nice vacation, do some nude bathing and watch stupid TV shows like everybody else.

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Fifty years after WWII it’s ok to be a German again …

Last years World Cup brought an unexpected boost in moral for the country, but I am afraid that the lack or slow speed of reforms will cause a lot of trouble in the future. Germany still is a strong economic power and pulling it’s weight on the in international scene. But it should concentrate more on it’s internal problems instead of trying to be a world player.

Two more issues are important: the Muslim integration and the aging society. But I consider these European issues, since all members have shrinking populations and yet to fully integrate our fellow Muslim citizens.

Overall Germany is a ‘normal’ and a nice country now with some baggage that’s slowly fading.

More? Wikipedia entry on Reunification

orangeguru (10-03 18:51) | No Comments | Permalink
Jimmy Carter and the Solar Panel

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Americas addiction to oil? Sure! After the OPEC oil shocks in the 1970’s people already thought about a more sustainable energy policy. Jimmy Carter tried to break new ground by installing a solar panel on the White House 1979. Smart move. Ronald Reagan had it removed a few years later. Neither Clinton, nor the Bush’s were seriously interested in alternative energy sources. Almost 30 years and hardly anyone has learned any lessons from the first oil shocks.

orangeguru (10-01 11:24) | No Comments | Permalink
A funny thing happened on the Way to Democracy

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Every time I hear a modern politician emphasize the need to democratize the backwards nations on this planet I want to applaud and punch them in the face at the same time. This also applies to many political commentators and of course Bloggers, who love to pounce undemocratic countries and make them switch to the best political system invented yet by sheer willpower.

Although I am a staunch supporter of Democracy, I don’t believe in it as an instant solution to most countries problems. Democracy is an indicator for a modern and developed nation - but Democracy itself doesn’t transform backwards societies into shiny new ones.

Europe has not only invented many forms of government - but also tried and tested many of them. It’s a rich tradition paid for with many life’s and often centuries of terrible consequences. Most of all it took Europe nearly two thousand long years to transform itself into these shining beacons of enlightenment and peace as we know it today.

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Aristotle’s Politics at work in Greece.

But the History of Democracy itself is a funny and ugly affair - with a huge whole between it’s beginning and final modern success.

Although it was so famously invented by the Greek nation states (most notably Athens) around 500 BC. But it was not the form of democracy we hold so dear today: woman, slaves and bloody foreigners were excluded from the process and of course regarded as second class citizens. Most important of all is that Demokratia was in the beginning successfully exported to some other nation states, but pretty fast abolished through other forms of government. Here is another good background article on Greek Democracy.

A similar development happened to the Roman Republic - which freed itself from it’s kings around the same time as the Greeks discussed in public meetings. The Roman Republic also had many elements of a modern state: a senate with lively debates, a citizenship, rule of law, votes and elected officials.

Greece lost it’s independence to the Romans around 150 BC - Rome itself turned slowly into a dictatorship after many bloody civil wars and chaotic rule by the Senate. This transformation found it’s great dictator with Julius Ceasar.

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A republican Senate is boring - lets get ourselves a proper Dictator

Now comes the funny thing - since the end of the Greece and roman experiments not much was heard or seen of Democracy in Europe. Some tribal societies had smaller democratic elections or forms of community (like the Althing in Iceland - established 930 or the polish Veche), but no big democratic state or system emerged for a long time.

Also the idea of Democracy was more or less forgotten by European thinkers and statesmen. The medieval mind was more occupied with symbolism and religion then democracy or equal rights for everyone. Now it was time for feudalism and religion to bring blood, tears and ignorance. The common men lost any chance in participating in ‘big government’.

For almost 1500 years until the Renaissance nobody had any real interest in old Greek ideas and values. Rich merchants, the clergy and feudal ruler continued to suppress peasants and workers. Even the Reformation didn’t change much about this. Martin Luther supported the ruling class during several peasant uprisings. It was not yet time for social equality nor democratic rights for everyone.

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May I have your head your Majesty?

But all was not lost - especially in England. The first Parliament (later split up into the House of Commons and House of Lords) was formed during the reign of King Henry III in the 13th century. Still not mass democracy, but a start to sharing powers and establishing the modern rule of law.

It was still a feudal affair, a political class system instead of a system of democratic equals. And still the Crown ruled supreme. It was a long and bitter process over many centuries and civil wars to change this.

Almost 500 years later Oliver Cromwell made the Parliament a permanent establishment instead of a ’seasonal affair’ created and disbanded by the Crown at will. Now the people reigned supreme instead of the Monarchy - but it took two bloody civil wars to cut of the monarch’s head (1649) and establish the Parliamentary System in England.

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What say ye old wooden tooth?

The biggest step for European Democracy happened in … America and their fight for Independence from the British Empire (1775 - 1783). The American Revolution started with the impressive Declaration of Independence in the year 1776.

This great document was the ‘result’ of the European ‘Age of Enlightenment’ - a political, artistic and philosophical movement that created the mental cornerstones of our modern societies with it’s humanism, socialism, secular and democratic systems. But it was the achievement of young American society to build the first nation based on these ideas. It was much harder to transform the old and encrusted European societies - but it happened eventually.

Now we have to applaud the french people who finally got it right and started their first revolution of 1789, which lead finally to the Abolition of Feudalism.

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The modern House of Commons from 1851.

It still took almost two hundred more years since Cromwell till Democracy was more firmly established in the UK by the Reform Act of 1867, which allowed more ‘normal’ men to vote instead of the privileged gentry and it also abolished so called rotten boroughs. Still no women were allowed to vote.

The real reason for the breakthrough of modern western Democracy was the Industrial Revolution. With the emergence of the working and middle class the old class system was finally abolished and replaced by new modern movements. Socialism, Feminism and Communism were triggered by the social consequences of the Industrial Revolution.

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Say hello to a new political power - the industrial working class.

The miserable living and working conditions of workers in slums, child labor and the slow organization of Labor created the pressure for huge changes, like medical care, housing projects, education, equal rights and the vote for everyone. The new economy broke down many social barriers and also allowed a new upward mobility.

And finally the suffragette movement - started in the early 1800’s - established the right to vote for woman (1920 in the US and 1928 in the UK). Once again a slow process that took almost another hundred years to be globally accepted.

The new ‘mass societies’ also demanded better forms of representation and government - as well as accountability and social justice. The shock of the Soviet October Revolution finally convinced even the most hardened elites in Europe that mass democracy was the best way to go for the future.

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Democracies have to be protected against the enemy from within

But modern Democracy faced two final test before it got the global stamp of approval: it had to fight to defend it’s values against Fascism and Communism before it was accepted as the best form of government. Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Moussolini and Franco transformed their nations by popular support into terrible societies.

So it was a long and bloody road from the first forms of Democracy until our modern mass Democracies. To establish itself Democracy needs first the rule of law and a broad industrial society with a rule of law and separation of powers.

Without economic support to pay for education, medical care and a national infrastructure it won’t work. You also need a big and strong middle class and educated elites to develop a political landscape, start parties, run ministries, the judiciary system, an independent media, ‘neutral’ police and armed forces. Too many Democracies fell victim to military interventions ‘to save the country’.

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We elect Allah as our Leader.

Equally important is a strong secular humanism within the society itself - the separation of Church and State. It took Europe centuries of war and millions of deaths to learn that lesson.

Many African or middle eastern countries lack many components I just mentioned and you can’t for example develop a strong economical base over night or an educated middle class to form a strong political landscape. The same is also still true for a few Asian countries, but they have picked up the basics much faster then many of their African and Arabic counterparts.

orangeguru (10-01 11:21) | No Comments | Permalink
Discover the Muslim Heritage of our World

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Click here to visit this great online exhibition. Europe almost didn’t survive it’s early Christian seclusion. Most knowledge of the romans and Greeks had been lost, science and exploration grinded to a total stop. Good thing that the Muslims / Arabs kept the Light of Knowledge burning. Europe had to re-import all that old knowledge via trade with the Muslims with Italy or Spain. This restarted the European spirit - the Renaissance heralded a new era.

So enjoy and explore this interesting exhibition that shows how advanced the Arab / Muslim world was. Too bad they also had their falldown and still haven’t recovered the cultural and scientific greatness they once had.

orangeguru (10-01 10:51) | No Comments | Permalink
I want those Jews back!

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Obviously there is hardly any Jewish culture left in Germany. Most of it is tucked away and hidden. Plus the old guilt complex makes any ‘normal’ exchange painful.

German Jews were always an important aspect of my country - until that maniac came along. The brain drain thanks to the holocaust as well as immigration was incredible. The intelligentsia, as well as artists and academic sector was depleted of thousands of important people.

We badly need that Jewish humor and wits back - plus a normalized relationship again, like in pre-war Germany before 1933.

orangeguru (09-28 17:10) | 2 Comments | Permalink
Slave Harnish

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"Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally."

Abraham Lincoln

orangeguru (09-25 15:19) | No Comments | Permalink
Europe’s almost death

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Until the late 12th century almost any cultural life or innovation had died in Europe. Christian mysticism and symbolism had completely taken over all the great minds. Thanks to the Arabs and many wars we started to exchange ideas again and rediscover lost authors and wisdom of Greek and Roman origin.

Not only animals, but also culture, art and science can be completely eradicated. Beware of religious fundamentalism, it won’t tolerate any knowledge beside itself and keep it’s followers dumb.

orangeguru (09-25 15:05) | No Comments | Permalink
Consumerism is bad for you!

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It is easy to hate big corporations!
It is easy to hate consumerism!
It is easy to hate globalization!
It is also easy to have nothing.

Instead of complaining about too much commerce, money and capitalism we should work on better distribution, competition and fair markets.

The Soviet Union for example was a rich country, but unable to create and maintain proper markets so people could earn money and buy stuff a decent price.

orangeguru (09-23 18:00) | No Comments | Permalink
Executions

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After several thousand years of bloody justice and millions of executions we should have figured out that neither capitol punishment, religious rules nor brutal torture will stop crime.

Harsh punishment won’t bring back dead people, nor does it make those left behind feel better. It is simply a convenient way for society to get rid of people who failed, are criminals, made a serious mistake or are simply sick.

Maybe time to try something different?

orangeguru (09-23 15:30) | No Comments | Permalink
Free Hawaii!

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The USA basically annexed Hawaii back then in 1898 when it was an independent Kingdom. Today many native Hawaiians have lost their own culture and identity - and most ground to the white man and big companies. What a shame.

Free Hawaii, stop the destruction of it’s unique environment and culture!

More? FreeHawaii.org, Higean.org and the Hawaiian Independence Blog.

orangeguru (09-21 13:48) | No Comments | Permalink
War Industry

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Great empires always had and needed big war industries. The Spartans, the Romans, the British Empire, Soviet Union and Nazi Germany - they all had huge war industries and built their societies around it. I am wondering how much military a society can digest before war itself becomes the main purpose of the nation, politics, it citizens and the economy.

Military-Industrial-Complex anyone?

More? Eisenhower’s Speech (text), Speech (audio only) and video excerpt.

orangeguru (09-20 13:15) | No Comments | Permalink
Sixpens and Shillings

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Today - I guess - all currency systems are strictly decimal. But back in the days many countries had odd coins and papermoney. The most famous were the british sixpence and shilling. Both were absolished in the 1970s.

From Wikipedia:

Before decimalisation in 1971, a shilling had a value of 12d (old pence), and was equal to 1/20th of a pound: there were 240 (old) pence to the pound. Post-decimalisation, “shilling” refers to the 5p coin, which is still worth 1/20th of a pound, because there are 100 new pence in a pound.

The name shilling is believed to come from the old Scandinavian word skilling, meaning a division, or a mark on a stick.

The abbreviation for shilling is “s”, from the Latin solidus, the name of a Roman coin. Often it was written informally with a slash, e.g., “1/6″ as 1 shilling, 6 pence or when there were no pence, with a slash then a hyphen, e.g., “11/-”.

During the reign of Queen Elizabeth II shillings were minted featuring both the English “three lions”, technically three leopards couchant, coat of arms, and the Scottish lion rampant coat of arms (see illustration above).

A slang name for a shilling was a “bob” (which was invariant in the plural, as in “that cost me two bob”).

To “take the King’s shilling” was to enlist in the army or navy, a phrase dating back to the early 1800’s. In a modern context, to say someone has “taken the King’s shilling” implies in a derogatory way that they are in the pocket (or employment) of another. To “cut someone off without a shilling” means to disinherit.

orangeguru (09-20 12:52) | 1 Comment | Permalink
The slow Death of the Wristwatch

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Since electronic components are cheap and little computers are everywhere - almost any digital gizmo offers now a built in clock: your cell phone, your iPod and even your digicam. Who still needs a huge ‘machine’ on your forearm that only can you tell the current time? In an age of multifunctional supertoys the single purpose mechanical device is slowly phased out.

I haven’t been wearing a wristwatch for over twenty years - anyone out there still using them?!

orangeguru (09-19 10:27) | 2 Comments | Permalink
My best friend - my former colonial Overlord

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Isn’t it amazing that Britain and America have become best friends although they fought two bloody wars against each other? What a difference only two hundred years can make? But it also shows that former enemies can be best buddies. But speaking the same language and some culture certainly helps a lot …

orangeguru (09-19 10:16) | No Comments | Permalink
The History of Cookies

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Taken from this great site here: 7th Century A.D. - The earliest cookie-style cakes are thought to date back to 7th century Persia A.D. (now Iran), one of the first countries to cultivate sugar (luxurious cakes and pastries in large and small versions were well known in the Persian empire). According to historians, sugar originated either in the lowlands of Bengal or elsewhere in Southeast Asia. Sugar spread to Persia and then to the Eastern Mediterranean. With the Muslim invasion of Spain, then the Crusades and the developing spice trade, the cooking techniques and ingredients of Arabia spread into Northern Europe.

In 510 BC , hungry soldiers of the Emperor Darius were near the river Indus, when they discovered some “reeds which produce honey without bees.” Evidently this early contact with the Asian sources of sugar cane made no great impression, so it was left to be re-discovered in 327 BC by Alexander the Great, who spread it’s culture through Persia and introduced it in the Mediterranean. This was the beginning of one of the best documented products of the Middle Ages.

orangeguru (09-18 13:34) | No Comments | Permalink
The Great Stink

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From Wikipedia:

The Great Stink or The Big Stink was a time in the summer of 1858 during which the smell of untreated sewage almost overwhelmed people in central London, England.

Part of the problem was due to the introduction of more modern flush toilets. While these were a step forward on the chamber-pots that most Londoners used, they dramatically increased the volume of water and waste that was now poured into existing cesspits. These often overflowed into street drains originally designed to cope with rainwater, but now also used to carry outfalls from factories, slaughterhouses and other activities, contaminating the city before emptying into the River Thames.

Cholera became widespread during the 1840s (not least because many people believed the disease was due to air-borne “miasma”; no one then realised that the disease was water-borne — that discovery was not made until 1854 by London physician Dr John Snow after an epidemic centred in Soho), and sanitation reform soon became a high priority. Bringing together several separate local bodies concerned with sewers, the consolidated Metropolitan Commission of Sewers was established in 1848; it surveyed London’s antiquated sewerage system and set about ridding the capital of an estimated 200,000 cesspits — an objective later accelerated by the “Great Stink”.

In 1858, the summer was unusually warm. The Thames and many of its urban tributaries were extremely polluted; the warm weather encouraged bacteria to thrive and the resulting smell was so overwhelming that it affected the work of the House of Commons (countermeasures included draping curtains soaked in chloride of lime, while members considered relocating upstream to Hampton Court) and the law courts (plans were made to evacuate to Oxford and St Albans). Heavy rain finally broke the hot and humid summer and the immediate crisis ended. However, a House of Commons select committee was appointed to report on the Stink and recommend how to put an end to the problem.

orangeguru (09-15 10:20) | No Comments | Permalink
Geniocracy vs. Mediocracy

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Many forms of government have been purposed, tried and tested. I personally would like to governed by the most intelligent in our society. But instead we are stuck with a Mediocracy (the rule of midiocre people) - please not to be confused with a Meritocracy. What would Plato say about our modern societies?

orangeguru (09-13 8:54) | No Comments | Permalink
Did they already forget early capitalism?

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Most people in rich countries seem to have forgotten the terrible days of early capitalism and industrialization? Worker stuffed into small houses or special workers areas in overcrowded cities. Terrible pollution damages humans and nature alike. Many must work hard and in backbreaking conditions, so others can get cheap goods and services. There are not insurances against work accidents or any healthcare packages. Industrial giants do what they want, since the government depends of their money.

That’s just like what is happening in China and India again. But workers rights and our modern social achievements are under attack in rich countries as well.

orangeguru (09-13 8:52) | No Comments | Permalink
9/11 not remembered

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The 9/11 anniversary past almost unnoticed last weekend. Some articles here and there … it is already yesterday’s news.

orangeguru (09-11 13:39) | 4 Comments | Permalink
Bloody Coup in Chile 11.9.1973

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Chile’s democratically elected president Salvador Allende was thrown out of government by a military coup lead by the dreadful Augusto Pinochet backed by the CIA and the Nixon administration.

This was the start of a fifteen year military dictatorship, much bloodshed and torture.

This is one of the many stupid ‘regime changes’ that brought only suffering to the ‘liberated’ people.

BBC on this day with some more details.

orangeguru (09-11 12:27) | No Comments | Permalink
Where are the Clowns and Jesters?

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“A clown is like aspirin, only he works twice as fast.”
Groucho Marx

It is sad that the old traditions of Clowns and Jesters. Modern - so called Comedians - often have less stage skills and social involvement like the old timers did (and sometimes still do). Humor as integral part of human society. connected to everything ranging from health to high politics has become more of a business instead of a ’shared good’ and challenge for all (like during the times of Fasching).

The goal today is to entertain, not to educate. Political satire, philosophy, social education and health concerns have mostly vanished from the agenda of modern comedians.

orangeguru (09-10 8:14) | 3 Comments | Permalink



copyright 2005 - 2008 for all entries dieter mueller or the respective copyright holder