- May, 30
2012 -
Car-uhl Schlach-tee! Dun dUh, duh duh dUn.
I have a new poem in The Brooklyn Review #29, which is now available. It’s from a series of prose poems that I was working on back in the fall.
Reblogged from: \\\ cschl \\\ cschl \\\ 12 notes
- April, 14
2012 -
Wyoming Short Film Contest - We're the Band
I have entered my documentary “We’re the Band” about Wyoming musician and artistic adventurer Chad Lore into the Wyoming short film contest and have been bugging everyone I know for votes ever since. The movie needs to be in the top 10 films at the end of the voting round in order to make it to the judging round and if the judges like it I could win $25,000 for my next project. I would really like to do a stylized western, which I will not be able to pull off without major funding!
If you have the time, it doesn’t take long to vote and the movie is only 15 minutes long and I would greatly appreciate a vote! Also, if you want to more about Chad his website is www.chadlore.com.
Forever West my Friends!
Derek
3 notes- March, 10
2012 -
(Source: ozneo)
Reblogged from: \\\ pixelastronaut \\\ nuance neocliche \\\ 365 notes
- March, 9
2012 -
I particularly like what Eric Ritskes has to say.
Points worth considering re: the Kony debate…
rtnt:
RTNT On The Problems With KONY 2012
The deluge of social media attention that has been given to the simplistic KONY 2012 campaign and the surrounding haze of misinformation has reaffirmed our purpose at Read This, Not That. Joseph Kony is a warlord and a monster - this much cannot be denied. The present controversy swirls not around Kony himself, but rather around the substance of the campaign, and the intentions of the organization behind it: Invisible Children.
Conversations are raging across the web between supporters and detractors - conversations that suffer, in many instances, from a lack of understanding about the current state of Uganda and of Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army (details of which are notably lacking from the film.)
There has been much resistance to criticism of the campaign, resistance founded in knee-jerk reactions meant to defend the perceived good intentions of Invisible Children. The appearance of a noble cause to mask questionable action is not anomalous in our world. As such, it is our responsibility to be skeptical, especially when engaged with propagandistic media that aims to affect us emotionally and prompt a very specific reaction: in this case, to give money to Invisible Children.
Our effort here is to offer articles that inform the debate surrounding KONY 2012 and to encourage everyone to embrace critical conversation, even when that gaze is directed at what appear to be good intentions. Things are rarely as simple as they are made out to be, and we can be sure that the state of Uganda and the LRA is not as simple as the KONY 2012 campaign makes it seem.
Michael Wilkerson, writing for Foreign Policy, asks what the video is meant to accomplish:
So the goal is to make sure that President Obama doesn’t withdraw the advisors he deployed until Kony is captured or killed. That seems noble enough, except that there has been no mention by the government of withdrawing those forces — at least any I can find. Does anyone else have any evidence about this urgent threat of cancellation? One that justifies such a massive production campaign and surely lucrative donation drive?
TMS Ruge, writing for Project Diaspora, pleads with us to respect the agency of Ugandans:
This IC campaign is a perfect example of how fund-sucking NGO’s survive…They are, in actuality, selling themselves as the issue, as the subject, as the panacea for everything that ails me as the agency-devoid African. All I have to do is show up in my broken English, look pathetic and wanting. You, my dear social media savvy click-activist, will shed a tear, exhaust Facebook’s like button, mobilize your cadre of equally ill-uninformed netizens to throw money at the problem.
To call the campaign a misrepresentation is an understatement. While it draws attention to the fact that Kony, indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court in 2005, is still on the loose, it’s portrayal of his alleged crimes in Northern Uganda are from a bygone era.
Musa Okwanga, writing for The Independent, discusses the complexities the video left out:
What the narrator also failed to do was mention to his son that when a bad guy like Kony is running riot for years on end, raping and slashing and seizing and shooting, then there is most likely another host of bad guys out there letting him get on with it. He probably should have told him that, too.
The LRA is reported to be 90% made up of abducted children – military defeat would mean engaging in combat and targeting of the very victims of this war; these children are the LRA.
The author of Visible Children examines the armies on the other side of the war:
Both the Ugandan army and Sudan People’s Liberation Army are riddled with accusations of rape and looting, but Invisible Children defends them, arguing that the Ugandan army is “better equipped than that of any of the other affected countries”, although Kony is no longer active in Uganda and hasn’t been since 2006 by their own admission.
People who have lived there for years, bona fide aid workers who have studied foreign policy and other relevant fields like public health, who are really there because they are trying to solve problems — they see Invisible Children as trying to promote themselves and a version of the narrative.
Eric Ritskes, writing at Wanderings, reminds us that it is not about us:
It falls into the trap, the belief that the problem is ignorance and the answer is education. When we tell more people about Kony and the LRA, something WILL happen. It’s not true…More education does not change the systems and structures of oppression, those that need Africa to be the place of suffering and war and saving…We need to learn: It’s not about us.
Patrick Wegner, writing at Justice in Conflict, offers some final thoughts:
To conclude, the Kony 2012 campaign is a reminder why we should see advocacy campaigns to interfere in conflicts with some scepticism, no matter how good the cause…. It also challenges us to think of ways how to design advocacy campaigns that mobilise many people without dumbing down the problem and its purported solution.
We put in a lot of work reading, reviewing, compiling, and excerpting these pieces for you, and hope you will consider them in this debate.
- The RTNT Team
Follow Read This, Not That on Tumblr / Facebook / Twitter
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- March, 8
2012 -
Reblogged from: \\\ mchasap \\\ Mchasap's movie madness (and more) \\\ 2 notes
- January, 24
2012 -
Reblogged from: \\\ vimeo \\\ The Vimeo Blog \\\ 335 notes
- January, 19
2012 -
Wookie the Chew.
Reblogged from: \\\ npr \\\ NPR \\\ 3,649 notes
- January, 8
2012 -
Knife to Meet You
Reblogged from: \\\ bonnielass \\\ Welcome to History \\\ 24,491 notes
- December, 24
2011 -
Newt feels left out
“Only a failed system excludes four out of the six major candidates seeking access to the ballot.”
Only a failed system brings six laughable candidates to the table and gives them a chance at actually becoming President of the United States.
- December, 14
2011 -
The 20 Unhappiest People You Meet In The Comments Sections Of Year-End Lists : Monkey See
npr:
Here’s a taste:
10. Harry The Hipster-Hater, Who Really, Really Hates Hipsters. “This is all hipster music. I guess it’s okay for hipsters, but I’m not enough of a hipster to like hipster picks like this. Too bad I’m not hipster enough. Maybe I’d like it better if I were more of a hipster.” [His username: “notahipstersorry.”]
Go ahead and click through to read the whole list. You know you want to. — Tanya
- December, 24
- January, 8
- January, 19
- January, 24
- March, 8
- March, 9
- March, 10
- April, 14