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A Year Update – Older, Different, and Generally Okay
May 9, 2019 in personal | Tags: Anecdata | by The Arbourist | 7 comments
Hey folks,
Reaching the mighty 45 today, and still mostly enjoying life. There is life after separation from one’s partner. It is different, the weird pangs one experiences with the absence of a well worn rituals remind me of what once was. Not really painful anymore the only ones left are the kind of feelings that make you pause for a bit of remembrance and introspection.
We are our past. It’s been a bit of a struggle to get properly contextualize past events. Steps in the process, so I’m told. Only through the passage of time can one frame the traumatic incidents in a more forgiving and positive light. A big thanks to all of you for being a welcome distraction when time in meatspace wasn’t really a hospitable place to be. Know that you’ve helped and I appreciate most everyone who takes the time to share this little corner of the internet with me.
We’ll see if we can get a more indepth this upcoming year and tackle some of the topics that continue to put angry bees in my bonnet. Take care folks, and be well. :)

Have to reshare my current musical labour.
Et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis:
And on earth peace, goodwill to all people
Vivaldi captures some of what the tapestry of life is like. The text is celebratory, yet the music is mostly sombre with majestic swells and delicious tension and harmonies if you listen for them. Life isn’t always happy, but rather, complex and should be celebrated as such.
(Edited one this morning, already. If anyone wants to be my copy editor let me know….sheesh. 😊)
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The Stanford Prison Experiment Revisited – Mindfields
May 8, 2019 in Psychology | Tags: Mindfield, Psychology, SPE | by The Arbourist | 2 comments
A video by Vsauce that challenges some of the narrative around the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Some further reading on the SPE.
https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1998-04417-001
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0146167206292689
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0098628314549703
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The DWR Feminist Quote of the Day – Featuring Raquel Rosario Sanchez
May 7, 2019 in Feminism, Radical Feminism | Tags: Intersectional, Radical Feminism, The DWR Radical Feminist Quote of the Day | by The Arbourist | Comments closed

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Damn the Torpedoes! – US Democrats Stopping Socialism in the US
May 6, 2019 in International Affairs, Politics | Tags: Democrats, Sanders, Socialisms, The Inauthentic Opposition, US Politics | by The Arbourist | 1 comment
Political theatre is interesting to observe. Not so much when the strongest nation on earth continues to dable with proto-fascist notions and leaders. The Democrats in the US will shortly (again) be showing their allegiance to the corporate interests that support them. Let’s hope they can’t obstruct Sanders this time as well. Paul Street writes in Counterpunch about this phenomena:
“A critical part of Joe “Anti-Populist” Biden’s media-crafted appeal is his “get things done” claim to be able to “reach out across the aisle” in the famous, hallowed, and CNN- and “P”BS-honored “spirit of bipartisanship.” That’s a shame. Why should we want a president who promises to team up with the widely loathed and creeping fascist white-nationalist Republican Party? And what has the holy bipartisanship that Biden is celebrated for embracing wrought for We the People over the years? Not much. As Andrew Cockburn wrote last month at Harpers:
“By tapping into…popular tropes—‘The system is broken,’ ‘Why can’t Congress just get along?’—the practitioners of bipartisanship conveniently gloss over the more evident reality: that the system is under sustained assault by a [bipartisan] ideology bent on destroying the remnants of the New Deal to the benefit of a greed-driven oligarchy. It was bipartisan accord, after all, that brought us the permanent war economy, the war on drugs, the mass incarceration of black people [Biden backed Bill Clinton’s ‘Three Strikes’ crime and prison bill – P.S.], 1990s welfare ‘reform’ [Biden backed the Clinton-Gingrich abolition of Aid for Families with Dependent Children], Wall Street deregulation and the consequent $16 trillion in bank bailouts, the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, and other atrocities too numerous to mention. If the system is indeed broken, it is because interested parties are doing their best to break it” (emphasis added).
Biden even took his embrace of the supposedly sacred virtue of bipartisanship to the grotesque level of forming close friendships with vicious southern white racists like Republican Senators Strom Thurmond and Jesse Helms, not to mention the frothing warmonger John McCain.
With Biden as with Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and a long line of dismal dollar Democrats in the neoliberal era, there’s an accurate translation for “reaching across the aisle to get things done:” joining hands across the two major party wings of the same corporate-imperial bird of prey to make policy in accord with the wishes of the rich and powerful.”
It would be nice if they would stop rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. I have my doubts though.
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The DWR Sunday Religious Disservice – A two’fer
May 5, 2019 in Religion | Tags: Religion, The DWR Sunday Religious Disservice | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Killing people for God and oppressing women, two of my favourite aspects of organized religion.


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Divided and Conquered – Social Movements in the US
May 4, 2019 in History, Politics | Tags: Divide and Conquer, Left Populism, Socialism, The Politiy in the US, US Poltics | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Interesting question. The US is home to some of the largest social movements in the Western World, yet the US is also the farthest behind in terms of actual gains for the working class, women, and minorities. How does this work? Vincent Navarro describes the situation in the US and proposes that one of the key concepts missing from the American polity is a party, or even a politic that can bring people of the lower classes together to bargain for their interests collectively. In other words, there is no real socialist option or ideological umbrella to foment behind in the political arena. Most certainly there are groups and popular movements, each with individual muscle, but more strikingly evident, a lack of sinew and connective tissue to bind these various groups together in the polity.
This situation in which the progressive forces in the US are atomized is no mere accident. The ruling classes have made it their project to remove socialist language and though from political discourse precisely because of how powerful class consciousness and solidarity are. The success of the ruling classes venture is evident and brought to light by Navarro:
Moreover, the American business and conservative class, aware that the division of victims favors the victimizer, supports such division, hindering and impeding the transversality of such movements and showing great hostility toward the socialist project, which uses the concept of social class as the starting point of such transversality. This project—the alliance of the popular classes against the ruling class—is the most feared, since transversality would allow a union of actions that would weaken the ruling classes’ ability to exploit the rest of society. When the 1984 presidential candidate Jesse Jackson (whom I had the honor to advise) presented himself as the candidate of the black minorities, the New York Times (the voice of the political and media establishment) wrote an extremely laudatory editorial. Four years later in 1988, when he presented himself as the working-class candidate in the Rainbow Coalition, which united all races and genders of the working class, the same newspaper wrote an editorial accusing him of “wanting to destroy the USA.” When, in the last primaries of 1988, journalists asked Jesse Jackson how he was going to win the vote of the white worker from Baltimore (an industrial city), he answered: “by making him see that he has more in common with the black worker, for being workers, than with the owner and manager of the company, for being white.” Jesse Jackson won the primary of the Democratic Party in Baltimore and almost won nationwide, despite the enormous opposition and hostility of the political and media establishments, including the apparatus of the Democratic Party. More recently, during the 2016 U.S. presidential elections, the socialist candidate Bernie Sanders emphasized the need to unite the “working American families” in a coalition that cuts across identity differences. He almost won the primaries, despite the opposition of the Democratic Party apparatus (including the opposition of the feminist movement NOW, which supported Hilary Clinton as its favored candidate).
Following the rise of so-called populism based on identity causes, it is important to underline this point. Promoting populism with its great diversity of anti-establishment movements, celebrating such diversity without any criteria in terms of transversality that can unite such movements, is to reproduce what has happened in the United States, the country of social movements (except for the socialist movement) where the left (and women and the minorities) is enormously weak.
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The Friday DWR Baroque Interlude – Haydn Piano Sonata, C major no.60
May 3, 2019 in Music | Tags: C major no.60, The Friday DWR Baroque Interlude - Haydn Piano Sonata | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
This first movement, a marvelous example of a sonata form constructed from a single theme, begins with what would appear to be the “bare bones” of a melody. This curious little theme, however, falling through the tonic triad and with its downward leaps of a seventh, possesses a beguiling humor and as the greatest composers have always shown: much can come from little. Fulfilling the requirements of sonata form, the theme recurs again, somewhat modified and in the key of the dominant, as the movement’s second theme. Throughout the first movement, the melody is subjected to a range of treatments—at times, itself being embellished by ornaments, at others, being accompanied by sweeping scales or countermelodies. A most interesting transformation of the melody comes near the end of the recapitulation where it is presented as a smooth legato line with its leaping sevenths transformed into harmonious 7-6 suspensions. Also, significant use of counterpoint is present, not only in the first movement, but throughout much of the piece and at times the texture almost gives one the impression of a Baroque keyboard piece.
Switching to an Adagio tempo and the key of the subdominant, the second movement is technically and emotionally challenging. The style of the movement is quite intricate and amply shows the intellectual prowess of its composer. Set in ternary form, the lyrical opening F major melody is contrasted by a middle section beginning with graceful descending C major scales. An embellished and somewhat altered return of the opening F major section rounds out the movement.
The finale, back in the tonic key of C major, is sheer mischievous humor. Its principal melody seems harmless enough until it abruptly, and one might even say rudely, ends with its leading note harmonized, not by the dominant chord, but by a first inversion on D sharp! Like the first movement, the entire movement is built from a single theme, though in this instance, the degree of variation is much less broad. If the first two movements of the sonata where an exercise in skill, then the finale can be nothing else than an exercise in wit.


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