Catalonia may CheckMate Spain On Overdue Bank Loans

concierto-normal-672xXx80Spanish politics is a mess.

  from ZeroHedge with thanks.  Everyone knew, going into last fall and winter, that the waters were about to get decidedly choppy. At the national level, Podemos was ascendant as Pablo Iglesias rode a wave of anti-austerity sentiment straight to the front of disaffected voters’ collective consciousness.

A nation beset by sky high unemployment had grown tired of the PP and PSOE duopoly that had dominated Spanish politics since at least the late 80s. Between Podemos and Ciudadanos, a shakeup was virtually assured.Familias-con-sus-ninos-a-favor-de-la-independencia-el-pasado-11-de-Septiembre

Continue reading “Catalonia may CheckMate Spain On Overdue Bank Loans”

review: The Fakir of Florence + The Anarchist Revelation..Paul Cudenec’s Anarcho-Spirituality

thefreeonline's avatarThe Free

united struggle..diverse freedom, 2 Publications on anarchism have been thriving since the early 2000s. Yet, there is still a place for surprisingly unique releases. Paul Cudenec’s The Fakir of Florence, March 2016, explores the relations between anarchism and philosophy, psychology, and religion.
 The Fakir of Florence is his first novel, following from his philosophical masterpiece The Anarchist Revelation which attempts no less to equip contemporary anarchism with  the transformation not only of society’s structures but also of people’s souls. People looking for in-depth analyses of governmental bodies, labor conditions, or gender and race relations might have to turn somewhere else. No single book has it all.fakir
Paul Cudenec is both a committed activist and a scholar who seems able to synthesize the insights of the past from the roots of anarchism to Sufism to astrophysics. Cudenec provides evidence that anarchism’s roots lie partly in this life-embracing source of inspiration, the bringer of art and poetry…

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European bison in Dutch Veluwe region soon

european bisons

petrel41's avatarDear Kitty. Some blog

This video shows an European bison ‘dancing’ in Belarus.

A 14 March 2016 report by Dutch NOS TV says that European bison will come to the Dutch Veluwe region soon.

In mid-April the animals will be brought there from Germany, and will be set free.

Last week in nature reserve De Maashorst in Brabant province bison were also introduced. In the Zuid-Kennemerland National Park the animals have been around for longer, since 2007.

The European bison is akin to the American bison. The animal lived in prehistoric times throughout Europe. Currently there are only five thousand European bison worldwide.

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Caminada per la solana de Montserrat

gmcollserola's avatargrupmuntanyenccollserola

Una vintena de cames (dividiu per dos) s´enfilaren pel corriol del Clot de la Mònica, a la solana montserratina fins a assolir les baumes del que va ser en el seu dia l´ermita de Sant Onofre. L´ambient monàstic i heremita no impedí a la gent del GMC compartir unes avellanes i baixar trescant pel camí de les Bateries. Perquè al GMC, no deixem ningú enrera, oi?

pujada La frescor del matí s´evita caminant pujada amunt!

Mirant Ecos “Veus el perfil de l´Aresta Arcarons dels Plecs?”

foto cim Al cim d´una agulleta de nom desconegut per nosaltres

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February Smashes Earth’s All-Time Global Heat Record by a Jaw-Dropping Margin

climate Chaos 2016

Jaime C.'s avatarCounter Information

weather
By Jeff Masters and Bob Henson

March 14, 2016 “Information Clearing House” – “WunderBlog” – On Saturday, NASA dropped a bombshell of a climate report. February 2016 has soared past all rivals as the warmest seasonally adjusted month in more than a century of global recordkeeping. NASA’s analysis showed that February ran 1.35°C (2.43°F) above the 1951-1980 global average for the month, as can be seen in the list of monthly anomalies going back to 1880. The previous record was set just last month, as January 2016 came in 1.14°C above the 1951-1980 average for the month. In other words, February has dispensed with this one-month-old record by a full 0.21°C (0.38°F)–an extraordinary margin to beat a monthly world temperature record by. Perhaps even more remarkable is that February 2015 crushed the previous February record–set in 1998 during the peak atmospheric influence of the 1997-98…

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Turkish intelligence and US knew of Ankara bomb attack days beforehand – docs

istanbul bombing

Undercover1's avatarUndercoverInfo

Cdcs-l-W4AE6Vtd

As the EU deal on refugees begins to unravel (see below) the Erdogan regime is being attacked from without (regarding its human rights record and EU membership aspirations) and from opponents within (the Government has, not unexpectedly, accused Kurdish separatists of being behind Sunday’s bomb in Ankara). There is evidence, however, from two documented sources, that the Turkish authorities knew well in advance that a bombing was planned in Ankara, but did not do anything about it or warn anyone – either through incompetence, or for other reasons yet to be disclosed. The question now is, has the conflict in Turkey reached tipping point, or can another ceasefire between the Government and its opponents be arranged? Going by President Erdogan’s actions over the last six months (destruction of Kurd cities/towns, resulting in the deaths of many Kurds) and his determination to wreak revenge on those he believes are responsible for…

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The Dispossessed… + The Day Before The Revolution…READ HERE


”I started by reading a whole mess of utopias and learning something about pacifism and Gandhi and nonviolent resistance. This led me to the nonviolent anarchist writers such as Peter Kropotkin and Paul Goodman. With them I felt a great, immediate affinity. They made sense to me in the way Lao Tzu did. They enabled me to think about war, peace, politics, how we govern one another and ourselves, the value of failure, and the strength of what is weak.

So, when I realised that nobody had yet written an anarchist utopia, I finally began to see what my book might be. And I found that its principal character, whom I’d first glimpsed in the original misbegotten story, was alive and well—my guide to Anarres. [4]”

EM: The Dispossessed is one of your most well-known works. Was there any novel which explored anarchism so explicitly before then?

UG: I don’t think so. That’s one of the reasons I thought of writing it. I’d been educating myself about pacifist anarchism for a year or more. I started reading the non-violence texts—Ghandi, Martin Luther King and so on—just educating myself about non-violence, and I think that probably led me to Kropotkin and that lot, and I got fascinated. Portland used to have a hundred independent bookstores, and one of them was rather political, and in the back room, if he knew you, he would take you in to see his anarchist stuff.

EM: When would this have been?

UG: When was that book? The early 80s? Late 70s? That store had some wonderful stuff, which at the time was very hard to find. Not so much anymore. And of course I found out about some of the modern anarchist writers. I was excited following that up. And then at the same time I was reading utopias. And there was a utopia for every political thing you could think of, but not for anarchism. Isn’t that odd? Well maybe I should write one. So then I had to re-read and read things to plan how on Earth would you organize an anarchist society, which was a lot of fun, but difficult.

EM: Especially on the scale of a world.

UG: Even a very thinly populated planet, there’s a lot of people to organize.

EM: You said in an essay that a Utopia, with a capital U, should be a practical alternative. That really struck me.

UG: I’d have to think about that. In my own mind I’ve moved on quite far from the utopia of The Dispossessed to the semi-utopia of Always Coming Home, where I did try to make it simply a lifestyle. There was no political basis at all, in the sense of European or large nation politics, therefore people think that I was trying to idolize the American Indians or something.

What I took from the Indians was, essentially, running your lives without a central government and using consensus as the basic mode, which you can’t do in a big society, it’s a matter of numbers. But I wanted to think out what it might be like. I think the lack of politics, for some of the readers, makes them think that it must be primitivist, and it ain’t necessarily so.

EM: It’s been influential in bringing the dialogue into the mainstream.

UG: Yeah. Writing a serious utopian novel that is an anarchist novel. It hadn’t been done, and there were hardly any anarchist texts that weren’t non-fiction, so just having a big fiction work that’s all about anarchists, I think made quite a difference.

EM: Especially with things like gender-neutral pronouns. It’s a conversation that’s been happening for a while, but is getting louder now. It shows how important linguistics is.

UG: Oh gosh yes. When you start looking for languages which have a gender neutral common pronoun, what have you got? Some kinds of Japanese and Finnish… I believe Finnish is gender neutral, which is cool. So translating The Left Hand of Darkness is a cinch for them.

 

   The Dispossessed. Ursula Le Guin’s anarchist utopia…Free Download HERE:

The New Utopian Politics of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed   or

Listen to Thye Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin at Audiobooks.com

“You cannot buy the revolution. You cannot make the revolution. You can only be the revolution.”
— Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed.leguin-the-dispossessed

Thoughts on The Dispossessed
There are some books that even with my untrained, unskilled and inexperienced eye can detect and confirm are true works of art, mastery in literature. Continue reading “The Dispossessed… + The Day Before The Revolution…READ HERE”