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[This was kept simple and brief so that I could put down the bullhorn that had been used by everyone up until I stood up to speak, and instead use the people’s mic.]

I am the 99%. I am here because I was on unemployment four times in the last seven years, and because the bank took my home. Because, like many of you, my family and I have depended on food stamps and other services to live. And we continue to live under the threat of those services disappearing. I’m here because I teach at a school where we are denied the ability to collectively bargain. But I, like you, am here because this system has no future. And we are building a model for a new community. We don’t want jobs, we want a living. We don’t want anything but a thriving community based on love, communication, and working through our problems together, through self-determination, self-management and real democracy.

Another world is not just possible. It is here right now.

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September 28th, 2011

Phenomenal experiences of technology

In “Feelings and phenomenal experiences” by Schwarz and Clore, in Social Psychology: Handbook of Basic Principles, they discuss the role […]

September 28th, 2011

The material and political confinement of social constructions

Between the politics of technology and the social construction of technological systems (SCOTS)[1], exists considerable tension over three distinct problems […]

August 2nd, 2011

Dispatches from the Decade of the Leak: The Antisec retaliation for Anonymous arrests

“I do not believe in leaks. I would execute leakers. They’re betraying our country.” –Ralph Peters, U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel […]

April 8th, 2011

The Decade of the Leak

After the first major Wikileaks release and the subsequent “manhunt” for Julian Assange, I dubbed this the Decade of the […]

January 23rd, 2011

Review of “Grassroots Postmodernism” by Esteva and Prakash

Esteva and Prakash’s Grassroots Postmodernism presents a powerful theoretical model for alternatives to development.  In reading this accessible, yet deep […]

December 19th, 2010

Jeph Jerman: calling out the voice of animated nature

Jeph Jerman could be described as an electro-acoustic artist, an experimental musician, or an avant-garde performer.  But what Jeph is, […]

May 12th, 2010

Personality Online: Anonymous, Toxic and Otherwise Destructive

I’ve been intensively studying the literature on how technology changes society. My focus has been on technologies much more simple […]

February 22nd, 2010

Post-development theory, alternatives to development and activist anthropology

In “Anthropology and the Development Encounter,” Arturo Escobar discusses the past approaches of development anthropology as problematic.  He focuses on […]

December 3rd, 2009

Characterizing a paradigm shift: The UN discourse on sustainable development as the greening of globalism

Below is the introduction to a 15,000 essay I just completed, summing up the theoretical and historical basis for my […]

November 14th, 2009

Quote from “Sustainable Development and Agenda 21” by Timothy Doyle

When I was researching for my work on Agenda 21 and the UNCED, I found very little wholesale criticism in […]