Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Pokemon Heart Gold Rom That Works With Desmume

Preface - Predhovor

P REFACE

U NINTENDED C ONSEQUENCES

K EVIN T UCKER
F or milions of years, humans have lived as anarchists. That is as autonomous individuals without the existence of coercive power, work, and institutions: without mediation. The „state of nature“ may more appropriately be called the natural anti-state. It was never paradise (the walled gardens) or utopia (the perfect place of the imagination), it just was. But it’s not simply a historical thing either. The Linear thought of Reason would have us believe so, being led by the prophets of Production (Moses, Smith, Marx, etc.). Anarchy is in our bones. It’s the way we act; it’s the way that milions of years of evolution have shaped us. As Paul Shepard puts it, we are beings of the paleolith: gatherer-hunters, primitives, beings of this earth.
But something happened. This is no great mystery and no matter how devoted we are to the gods of Progress and Production, we all know things aren’t going too great. We’ve been led astray. To try and confront what that means, we must first understand what we are. The life of nomadic gatherer-hunters is intrinsically different from the spiritually dead world of modenity: the current face of the global, technological civilization. Gatherer-hunters themselves are no different though. There are no born primitives or born civilized, but people born of different time and place and a large portion of us who had the misfortune of being born in the latter category.
Nomadic gatherer hunter societies typify egalitarianism. They are, as they must be by their nature, flexible and organic. Being nomadic means being adaptive: that is the key to anarchy. When there are droughts, societies can move to more hospitable regions. Boundaries, where they exist at all, are defined by the center rather than arbitrary lines or markers. Who is at one site at any particular time is fluid and there are no strangers. Egos are intentionally deflated so that no skill becomes more valued than others. Population is kept in check by the nature of mobility and what Richard B. Lee calls the „contraceptive on the hip.“
But most importantly, everyone is capable of fully sustaining themselves. So when people do group together, they are doing so on their own terms. If people get angry or frustrated with others, they are free to leave and the impact of being shunned is harshly felt. There are no real specialists and no possessions that cannot be made or exchanged easily. There is no mediation between life and means of living.
The nomadic gatherer-hunters live in an entirely sacred world. Their spirituality reaches as far as all of their relations. They know the animals and plants that surround them and not only ones of immediate importance. They speak with what we would call „inanimate objects“, but they can speak the same language. They know how to see beyond themselves and are not limited to the human languages that we hold so dearly. Their existence is grounded in place, they wander freely, but they are always home, welcome and fearless.
It’s easy to criticize any theory that looks at „original sins“ or points fingers towards any particular event. In many ways I agree, but I think the picture is really more complex. At no point was there a conscious decision to be civilized or a point when people stopped listening to the earth. Instead there are certain things that have happened and have had serious implications for the way we deal with each other and the earth around us.
I don’t think that the first people to domesticate plants and animals knew what they did would turn the world they loved into something to eventually fear. Or that growing the fear of wildness would eventually mean destroying everything outside the barriers of the gardens to ensure that they did not creep in. Its really doubtful that the first people to settle in one area thought they were taking steps toward a life of warfare. Or that having more children would mean a constant and increasing state of growth. It’s doubtful that the first people to become largely dependent upon stored foods would realize that this would mean the creation of coercive power and break the egalitarianism that a group of autonomous people had.
Of course, none of us will ever know for sure what was being thought or why these things were being done. There’s no shortage of theories about the origins of domestication, sedentism or surplus-orientation, but for all practical purposes those theories are really irrelevant. Why steps were taken in the first place does not change the fact that those steps have carried a number of implications. When each of those steps was taken, something significant did happen and a trail of unintended cosequences connects those events with where we are now.
But this is not a sign that governments or power is merely some benign force. Politicians and profiteers know that they are destoying the planet and poisoning all life, they just see money as more important. Their choices are hardly „unintended“ compared to the person who unthinkingly plugs into an electrical outlet or pours gasoline into a car. Powermongers will act in their own interest, but their power relies on our complacency with the terms they have poured us in.
This doesn’t mean that every person involved is neccessarily aware or that they should be damned; that doesn’t get us very far. But what is obvious is that our situation is getting increasingly worse. With the growing dependency on fossil fuels, we are stealing from the future in a way never known before. We are standing in a rather familiar position: like the Cahokia, Chacoan, Maya, Aztec, Mesopotamian, and Roman civilizations before us, we aren’t seeing the symptoms of collapse that define our times. We aren’t thinking about anything but what is good for us here and now. We aren’t thinking outside of our conditioning. We arent thinking outside of civilization.
But we dont even know it. We aren’t even given the ability to read the times, because it is contrary to the Rational path of Reason laid out before us.
But things have changed and are changing. Whether we recognize it or not: something will happen. We have the ability to look back and try and awaken the part of ourselves that has been buried by domestication: the civilizing process. We can see that there is something about the nomadic gatherer-hunter existence that just worked. We can see that this was broken down by sedentism, domesticaton, surplus, and those breakdowns would solidify further with horticulture, the creation of states, agriculture and even more so with industrialism and technological modernity.
Something about these steps took away our autonomy. They made us dependent. Supposedly we were freed from the barbarism of self-determination toward the new Freedom of work and a world of stuff. We sold egalitarianism for plastic.
Our current situation is a grim one but we are not hopeless. We have before us the legacy of unintended consequences that slowly took us from egalitarianism to totalitarianism. The question we have to ask is what have we lost. What part of our being has been sold off in the process? We can look beyond the myths of Reason, of divine, Linear time, and Progress, and awaken ourselves in the process.
Civilization is a huge target. Overcoming domestication is a massive undertaking, but our souls and lives are at stake. But the future and the past are closer than we think. The blood and spirit of anarchy flows through our veins. We don’t need to look ‘before civilization’; we just need to listen to ourselves and the world around us. We have the benefit of seeing what steps have taken us down the wrong path, and with that we can start taking steps toward anarchy.
And in this process, the process of becoming human, the abstractions between our fate and the fate of the world will wither. There will be no question of when it is the right time to strike against the concrete manifestations of civilization or to know where to strike.
When we learn to open ourselves to wildness and chaos, the organic anarchy of our beings will flow. Attacking civilization is no easy feat, but when we listen, when we embrace our anti-state of nature, we will know exactly what to do.

- Kevin Tucker
10 May 2004
P REDHOVOR

N EZAMÝŠĽANÉ N ÁSLEDKY

K EVIN T Ucker


P of millions years, people lived as anarchists. This is as autonomous individuals without the existence of coercive government, labor and institutions: without mediation. "State of nature" may more appropriately named anti natural state. It was never paradise (garden walled) or utopia (perfect place of the imagination), he just was. But it's not just a historical thing. Linear thinking on the cause, led by the prophets of Production (Moses, Smith, Marx, etc.), we would like to sell. Anarchy is in our bones. It's the way we act, it is the way in which we were created over millions of years of evolution. As Paul Shepard was being Paleolithic: gatherer-hunters, primitive, creatures of the earth.
But something happened. It's no big mystery and no matter how devoted we are gods, Development and Production, we all We know that things are not so favorable. We have been led astray. In order to examine to what it means and confront it, we must first understand that what we are. The life of nomadic gatherer-hunters is intrinsically different from the spiritually dead world of modernity: the current face of the global, technological civilization. Although hunter-gatherers are not themselves others. There are no born native primitive or civilized, but are people born in another time and place, and the greater portion of us who had the misfortune to be born in the latter category.
nomadic hunter gatherer society is characterized by egalitarianism. They are, as must be its nature, flexible and organic. Being nomadic means to be adaptive: that is the key to anarchy. When there are droughts, companies are able to move to more hospitable regions. Boundaries when they exist at all, are defined by the center and not arbitrary lines and characters. Who is the one place at a certain time is flexible and there are no strangers. Egos are intentionally uzemňované that no skill was more valued than others. The population is controlled by the nature of mobility and the Richard B. Lee called "contraceptive on the hip."
But most important is that everyone is able to completely take care of themselves. So when people want to be in a group, they do so under their own criteria. If someone gets angry or frustrated with others, can leave at any time and from other bočenia impact is felt profoundly. There are no real experts, and no possessions, which can not be easily made or changed. There is no mediation between life and means of survival.
nomadic hunter-gatherers live in a world entirely sacred. Their spirituality goes so far as their relations. They know the animals and plants that surround them, and not only those of immediate importance. Speak with those we call "inanimate objects", but they can speak the same language. They know how to look beyond themselves and are not limited to human speeches that we hold so dearly. Their existence is in place, they wander freely, but are always at home, welcome and fearless. It is easy
criticize any theory that deals with the "original sins" or points the finger at any particular event. In many ways I agree, but I think this picture is more complex. At any given time, the decision was not made aware of the civilized or a point when people stopped listening to country. Instead, there are certain things that have happened and have had serious implications for the way we deal with each other and how we treat the earth.
I do not think the first people to domesticate plants and animals, knew what they were doing, transform the world they loved for something that will have to worry about. Or enlarging the fear of the wilderness will eventually mean the destruction of everything outside the walls of the gardens to ensure that nothing will not creep. It is indeed unlikely that the first people to settle in one place they were taking steps toward a life of war. Or that more children will have a constant and increasing state of growth. It is arguable that the first people who were largely dependent on stored stocks, realize that this will mean the creation of coercive power and break the egalitarianism, a group of autonomous people.
course, none of us will ever know for sure, what if people think or why they did such things. There is no shortage of theories about the origins of domestication, sedentizmu or orientation of the surplus, but for all practical purposes, this theory side. That why they were initially performed these steps does not change the fact that these actions caused any consequences. When was undertaken by each one of these steps, it became something significant and the path of unintended consequences associated with these events where we are now.
But this is not a sign that governments are very or some benign force. Politicians and profiteers know that destroy the planet and poisoning all life, they just see money as more important. Their choices are hardly "unintended" compared with a person who thoughtlessly just plugs into an electrical outlet or pour gasoline into a car. Powermongers will act in their own interests, but their power depends on our satisfaction sa s podmienkami, ktoré na nás uvalili.
To neznamená, že každá zúčastnená osoba je si toho nutne vedomá alebo že by mala byť prekliata; to nás ďaleko nedovedie. Ale je očividné, že naša situácia sa stáva horšou a horšou. S rastúcou závislosťou na fosílnych palivách, okrádame budúcnosť ešte nepoznaným spôsobom. Stojíme teraz už v pomerne známej pozícii: tak ako pred nami Cahokiánkse, Chacoánske, Májske, Aztécke, Mezopotámske a Rímske civilizácie, nevidíme symptómy kolapsu, ktorý definuje našu dobu. Nerozmýšľame about anything other than about what is good for us here and now. We do not suspend our habits. Do not think beyond civilization.
But we dont even know. We are not even the ability to read today's times because it is the Rational Reason road before us.
But things have changed and are changing. Whether we recognize it or not: something will happen. We have the ability to look back and try and wake up that part of ourselves that has been buried by domestication: the civilization process. We can see Yet that is something to the existence of nomadic gatherer-hunters that just worked. We can see that this was broken sedentizmom, domestication, surplus, and those breakdowns continue strengthening horticulture, developing countries, agriculture and even more industry and technological modernity.
Some of these steps took away our autonomy. They made us dependent. Supposedly we were freed from the barbarism of self-determination of the new Freedom of the work and world affairs. We sold egalitarianism for plastic.
Our current situation is bad, but we are not without hope. We have a legacy of unintended consequences, which slowly took us from egalitarianism to totalitarianism. Question that we must ask is, what we lost. Which part of our being has been sold off in this process? We can see beyond the myths of reasons, deities, linear time, and Progress, and wake up in the process.
Civilization is a huge target. Overcome domestication is a huge task, but the stakes are our souls and lives. But past and future are closer than we think. Blood spirit of anarchy and flows through our veins. We do not need to watch "against civilization" we just need to listen to ourselves and the world around us. We have the advantage to see that steps us down the wrong path, and that we can take steps to anarchy.
And in this process, the process of becoming a man of abstraction between our fate and the fate of the world will wither. There will be no doubt when the time is right to strike against the concrete manifestations of civilization or know where to strike.
When we learn to open the wildness and chaos, will flow organic anarchy of our beings. Attacking civilization is no easy feat, but when we listen, when embrace our natural anti-state, we know exactly what to do.

- Kevin Tucker
May 10, 2004

Monday, June 25, 2007

Order Of Service In A Catholic Confirmation

Quotation - Citáty

AGAINST CIVILIZATION, in its new expanded edition, provides the means of understanding the dehumanizng core of modern civilization, and the ideas that have given rise to the anarcho-primitivist movement. The editor of this compelling anthology is John Zerzan, author of Future Primitive (Autonomedia) and Running on Emptiness (Feral House).

„I celebrate John Zerzan’s anthology harboting the best of civilized people’s critiques of civilization. Herein the reader will discover the questions that need to be asked and the insights that beg to be nurtured if humankind and the natural world as we know it are to thrive into the future.
This book is that important.“

- Chellis Glendinning, author of My Name is Chellis and Im in Recovery from Western Civilization

„It is its collective refusal to say ‘Here is civilization: just accept it’ that makes this volume so important. Read it and you will never think of civilization in the same way again. Or put any more faith than a grain of mustard seed in its unimpeded future.“
- Kirkpatrik Sale, author of Rebels Against the Future

„This is an extraordinary collection by the most important anarchist thinker of our time, a potent introduction to, as Zerzan so accurately puts it, the pathology of civilization. For decades now Zerzan has been articulating a practical and theoretical critique of civilization, and this book – though an edited anthology of his own and other people’s essays – brings it all together in a compelling, undeniable way. I love all of Zerzans books, but I think I love this one the best.“
- Derrick Jensen, author of A Language Older Than Words

Contemporary records indicate that, more than once, both rich and poor wished that the barbarians would deliver them from the (Roman) Empire. While some of the civilian population resisted the barbarians (with varying degrees of earnestness), and many more were simply inert in the presence of the invaders, some actively fought for the barbarians. In 378, for example, Balkan miners went over en masse to the Visigoths. In Gaul the invaders were sometimes welcomed as liberators from the Imperial burden, and were even invited to occupy territory.
- Joseph Tainter

To combat cultural genocide one needs a critique of civilization itself.
- Gary Snyder

VISUALIZE INDUSTRIAL COLLAPSE
- Earth First!


PROTI CIVILIZÁCII, vo svojej novej rozšírenej edícii, poskytuje prostriedky pochopenia neľudskej podstaty modernej civilizácie a myšlienky, ktoré podnietili vznik anarcho-primitivistického hnutia. Editor tejto neprekonateľnej antológie je John Zerzan, autor kníh Primitív budúcnosti a Beh naprázdno .

„Oslavujem príchod antológie Johna Zerzana zaoberajúcej sa najlepšími kritikami civilizácie od civilizovaných ľudí. Tu čitateľ nájde otázky, ktoré musia byť položené a preniknutia do podstaty veci, ktoré žiadajú about to be nurtured if humankind and the natural world as we know it are to thrive in the future.
This book is so important. "

- Chellis Glendinning, author My Name is Chellis and Recovery from Western Civilization

" It is a collective refusal to say "Here is civilization: accept it", what makes this book so important. Read it and you'll never think of civilization as before. Or put more faith than a grain of mustard seed in its peaceful future. "
- Kirkpatrik Sale, author of Rebels Against the Future

"This is a remarkable collection of the most important anarchist thinker of our time, an effective introduction, as Zerzan aptly called, the pathology of civilization. Zerzan decades reflects the practical and theoretical critique of civilization, and this book - though an edited anthology of essays and other authors - all together in a compelling, undeniable way. I love all Zerzans books, but I think that I love most. "
- Derrick Jensen, author of Language Older Than Words

Contemporary records indicate that more than once, both rich and poor wished to exempt from the barbarians (Roman) Empire. While some civilians resisted the barbarians (with varying degrees of severity), and many others simply did not respond to the presence of the invaders, some actively fought for the barbarians. For example, in the year 378, Balkan miners went over en masse to the Visigoths. In Gaul invaders were sometimes welcomed as liberators from imperial burden, and were even invited to occupy the territory.
- Joseph Tainter

To combat cultural genocide one needs a critique of civilization itself.
- Gary Snyder

VISUALIZE INDUSTRIAL COLLAPSE
- Earth First!

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Hp 1500l Win 7 Driver

Introduction - Úvod - John Zerzan

I NTRODUCTION

J ohn Z erzan

S Ince the first edition of Against Civilization (1999) the general perspective Referred to by its title has begun to make sense to a growing number of people. An overall crisis - personal, social, environmental – is rapidly deepening, making such an indictment feasible, if not unavoidable.
     This collection is, among other things, a reminder that critiques of ciilization itself are anything but new. And the past five years have provided an opportunity to add voices to the chorus of doubters, those with enough vision to think outside civilizational confines.
     The 15 additional selections include correctives to a serious deficiency of the original book: the paucity of women and indigenous contributors (not exclusive categories, of course).
     The current edition makes some advance in these vital areas, I believe.
     Discontent with civilization has been with us all along, but is coming on now with a new freshness and insistence, as if it were a new thing. To assail civilization itself would be scandalous, but for the conclusion, occurring to more and more people, that it may be civilization that is the fundamental scandal.
     I wont dwell here on the fact of the accelerating destruction of the biosphere. And perhaps equally obvious is the mutilation of „human nature“, along with outer nature. Freud decided that the fullness of civilization would bring, concomitantly, the zenith of universal neurosis. In this he was evidently a bit sanguine, too mild in his prognosis.
     It is impossible to scan a newspaper and miss the malignancy of daily life. See the multiple homicides, the 600-percent increase in teen suicide over the past 30 years; count the ways to be heavily drugged against reality; ponder what is behind the movement away from literacy. One could go on almost endlessly charting the boredom, depresion, immiseration.
     The concept of progress has been in trouble for a few decades, but the general crisis is deepening now at a quickening pace. From this palpable extremity it is clear that something is profoundly wrong. How far back did this virus originate? How much must change for us to turn away from the cultural death march we are on?
     At the same time, there are some who cling to the ideal of civilization, as to a promise yet to be fulfilled. Norbert Elias, for example, declared that “civilization is never finished and always endangered.” More persuasive is the sobering view of what civilization has already wrought, as in today’s deadening and deadly convergence of technological processes and mass society. Richard Rubenstein found that the Holocaust “bears witness to the advance of civilization,” a chilling point further developed by Zygmunt Bauman in his Modernity and the Holocaust. Bauman argued that history’s most gruesome moment so far was made possible by the inner logic of civilization, which is, at bottom, division of labor. This division of labor, or specialization, works to dissolve moral accountability as it contributes to technical achievement in this case, to the efficient, industrialized murder of millions.
     But isn’t this too grim a picture to account for all of it? What of other aspects, like art, music, literature -are they not also the fruit of civilization? To return to Bauman and his point about Nazi genocide, Germany was after all the land of Goethe and Beethoven, arguably the most cultural or spiritual European country. Of course we try to draw strength from beautiful achievements, which often offer cultural criticism as well as aesthetic uplift. Does the presence of these pleasures and consolations make an indictment of the whole less unavoidable?
     Speaking of unfulfilled ideals, however, it is valid to point out that civilization is indeed “never finished and always endangered.” And that is because civilization has always been imposed, and necessitates continual conquest and repression. Marx and Freud, among others, agreed on the incompatibility of humans and nature, which is to say, the necessity of triumph over nature, or work.
     Obviously related is Kenneth Boulding’s judgment that the achievements of civilization “have been paid for at a very high cost in human degradation, suffering, inequality, and dominance.”
There hasn’t been unanimity as to civilization’s most salient characteristic. For Morgan it was writing; for Engels, state power; for Childe, the rise of cities. Renfrew nominated insulation from nature as most fundamental. But domestication stands behind all these manifestations, and not just the taming of animals and plants, but also the taming of human instincts and freedoms. Mastery, in various forms, has defined civilization and gauged human achievement. To name, to number, to time, to represent symbolic culture is that array of masteries upon which all subsequent hierarchies and confinements rest.
     Civilization is also separation from an original wholeness and grace. The poor thing we call our “human nature” was not our first nature; it is a pathological condition. All the consolations and compensations and prosthetics of an ever more technicized and barren world do not make up for the emptiness. As Hilzheimer and others came to view domestications of animals as juvenilizations, so also are we made increasingly dependent and infantilized by the progress of civilization. Little wonder that myths, legends, and folklore about gardens of Eden, Golden Ages, Elysian fields, lands of Cockaigne, and other primitivist paradises are a worldwide phenomenon. This universal longing for an aboriginal, unalienated state has also had its dark flip side, a remarkable continuity of apocalyptic beliefs and prophets of doom - two sides of the same coin of a deep unhappiness with civilization.
     Centuries of the persistence of utopias in the literature and politics of the West have more recently been replaced by a strong dystopian current, as hope seems to be giving way to nightmare apprehensions. This shift began in earnest in the nineteenth century, when virtually every major figure-e.g., Goethe, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Melville, Thoreau, Nietzsche, Flaubert, Dostoevski-expressed doubt about the vitality and future of culture. At the time that technology was becoming a worldwide unifying force, social scientists such as Durkheim and Masaryk noted that melancholy and suicide increased precisely with the forward movement of civilization.
In terms of the current intellectual domestication, postmodernism, despite a certain rhetoric of rebellion, is merely the latest extension of the modern civilizing process. For its moral cowardice as well as its zero degree of content, a horrific present is thus captured all too well. Meanwhile, Forbes magazine’s seventy-fifth-anniversary cover story explored “Why We Feel So Bad When We Have It So Good,” and the simple graffito “I can’t breathe!” captures our contemporary reality with precision.
     From every camp, voices counsel that there can be no turning back from the path of progress, the unfolding of still more high-tech consumerist desolation. How hollow they sound, as we consider what has been lost and what may yet, one desperately hopes, be recovered.


OJ VOD

J ohn Z erzan

O d first edition books against civilization (1999) began to give a general view already alluded to in the title of the book sense the growing number of people. Global crisis - personal, social, environmental - is rapidly deepening, where such charges possible or even necessary.
This collection, among other things, is a reminder that the critique of civilization itself is not a new thing. A recent five years provided an opportunity to deliver voice chorus of skeptics, those with enough vision to think outside the constraints of civilization.
15 additional selections include repairs to a serious shortage of the original book: the lack of women and indigenous contributors (of course not as exclusive categories).
I believe that the current edition of the little progress in these essential areas.
discontent with civilization was here with us all the time, but now appears with a new freshness and insistence, as if it were a new matter. Criticize civilization would seem scandalous, but eventually, as there is more and more people is that it can be a civilization that is the major scandal.
will not address the fact there is still more rapid destruction of the biosphere. And perhaps equally obvious is the mutilation of "human nature" together with the mutilation of external nature. Freud concludes that the fullness of civilization will concomitantly with each peak of the universal neurosis. This was obviously a bit optimistic, too modest in his predictions.
It is impossible to skim through newspapers and overlook malignancy of daily life. Note the multiple murders, 600 percent increase in the number of suicides of minors over the past 30 years, count the ways it can be heavily drugged from reality, consider what is behind the movement beyond literacy. Could would continue almost indefinitely recording boredom, depression, misery.
Idea development of recent decades has problems, but the general deepening crisis is now accelerating pace. This is of obvious extreme, it is clear that there is something deeply wrong. Where and when is the origin of this virus? How much it has changed for us, that we have departed from this mortal progress, which now are we going?
same time, there are those who firmly adhere to the ideal of civilization as a promise which is yet to be completed. For example, Norbert Elias stated that "civilization is never completed and always endangered." Convincing a serious look at what she could give rise to civilization as we see in today's stultifying and deadly convergence of the technological process and mass society. Richard Rubenstein found that Holocaust "suggests the development of civilization", menacing the fact that further elaborated on Zygmunt Bauman in his book Modernity and the Holocaust. Bauman argued that so far most abhorrent moment in history was provided by internal the logic of civilization, which is the basis of division of labor. This division of labor, or specialization, working for the abolition of moral responsibility, which in this case contributes to the technological success, an efficient, industrial murder of millions.
But it's not too terrible images that give only the responsibility? What other aspects such as art, music, literature - whether they are also the fruit of civilization? So I went back to Bauman and his view on the Nazi genocide, Germany was still the country of Goethe and Beethoven, probably cultural or spiritually most advanced European country. Of course, we try to pull power from the magnificent achievements, which often offer cultural criticism as well as the aesthetic uplift. Makes the presence of pleasure and comfort to charge a whole less necessary?
Speaking of blank ideals, however, is eligible to note that civilization really "is never completed and always endangered. And therefore, that civilization has always been forced on and requires constant dobívanie and repression. Marx and Freud, among others, agreed on the incompatibility of people and nature, which refers to the need to triumph over nature, or work.
is clearly related judgments Kenneth Boulding, that the achievements of civilization, "we paid a very high price of human degradation, misery, inequality and nadvádou."
On The most characteristic of civilization is not a unanimous view. For Morgan it was writing, for Engels state power; for Child boarding places. Renfrew nominated separation from nature as most important. But domestication underlying all these manifestations, not only tame animals and plants, but also repression of human instincts and freedoms. The government, in various forms, define civilization and human achievement assessed. Pomenuvávať, numbered, tail, represent symbolic culture is set by governments and controls, which rely on hierarchy and other restrictions.
Civilization is also separate from the original integrity and charm. The poor thing we now call our "human nature" was not our first naturalness, it's pathological condition. All the comfort and compensation and prostheses always more desolate world and the price we know to fill the void. How Hilzheimer and others saw as zmladzovanie domesticated animals, so are we more dependent and infantilized development of civilization.
It is no wonder that the myths, legends and folklore of the heavenly gardens, Golden Ages, Elysiánskych fields, and other countries Cockaigne primitivist havens are a global phenomenon. This general desire for Indigenous, neodcudzenom state should also reversed its dark side, an interesting link apocalyptic visions and prophets cessation - two sides of same coin deep dissatisfaction with civilization.
endurance century utopias in literature and politics west, recently exchanged grim schools of thought when it seems that hope gives way to a bad premonition. The break began seriously stand out in the nineteenth century, when virtually every major figure - eg., Goethe, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Melville, Thoreau, Nietzsche, Flaubert, Dostoevsky - Expressed doubt about the vitality and future of culture. At a time when the technology became a worldwide joining the force, noted social scientists like Durkheim and Masaryk, the melancholy and suicide increase the precision of the procedure of civilization.
Regarding the current intellectual domestication, postmodernism, despite a rhetoric of rebellion, so it is only the latest extension of the modern civilizing process. For its moral cowardice as well as its zero quantity of content is so well captured too severe present. Meanwhile, the leading article of Forbes magazine to its 75 anniversary studied "Why do we feel so bad when we are so good," graffiti and simple "I can not breathe!" Captures our current reality with precision.
from each camp Votes advise that the reverse path of development, more and more development of the consumer stiesnenosti is not possible. How to read empty when we consider what has been lost, and what still may be, someone might desperately dúfať, znovu nadobudnuté.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Brown Dishcarge For A Kidney Infection

Foreword - Predslov

Foreword

T he thing I admire about Chicano village life in New Mexico is that beneath the sleek overlay of trucks and telephones lies the still-vital infrastructure of an ancient and, until recently, undisturbed way of life. Men hunt elk and turkey. Women know plants. Curandera-healers with their potent prophetic powers live among us. Everyone knows how to build a mud house, dig the irrigation ditch, grow corn, ride a horse, and navigate through the forest on a moon-lit night. And despite the raging poverty that universally flattens land-based communities when they are conquered, colonized, and consumed, there is more happiness here than in any place I have known. Its a simple happiness, nothing fancy, a here-and- now contentment: a story told at the gas pump, an invitation to go fishing, a twist of language that illuminates the irony of history. Living here, I have learned not to contemplate a trip to the dump or village store without carrying with me an extra twenty minutes, or an hour, to give and receive.

     Such experiences reinforce what, after decades of research and dozens of social-change movements, I have long suspected. That it is not just contemporary industrial society that is dysfunctional; it is civilization itself. That we humans are born to be creatures of the land and the sea and the stars; that we are relations to the animals, cohorts to the plants. And that our well-being, and the well-being of the very planet, depend on our pursuance of our given place within the natural world.
      It is against these musings that I celebrate the coming of John Zerzan’s accomplishment of an anthology harboting the best of civilized people’s critiques of civilization. Herein the reader will discover the questions that need to be asked and the insights that beg to be nurtured if humankind and the natural world as we know it are to thrive into the future.
     This bok is that important.

- Chellis Glendinning
Chinayó, New Mexico
26th July 1998
Foreword

In ec, I admire you for Chicanskom village life in New Mexico is that the coating of trucks and sleek phones lying still alive ancient infrastructure and, until recently, untouched way of life. Men hunt elk and turkey. Women know plants. Therapists Curandera live among us with their potent prophetic powers. Everyone knows how to build a clay house, the irrigation ditch to grow maize, ride a horse, and navigate through the forest during the monthly night. And despite the terrible poverty that generally affects the communities dependent on the ground when they are conquered, colonized and consumed, there is more satisfaction than I've seen elsewhere. It's simple happiness, nothing fancy, here-and-now: a story told at the gas pump, an invitation to go fishing, a twist of language, which illuminates the irony of history. When I lived here, so I learned not to contemplate a trip to the dump or village store without carrying with me twenty minutes or an hour, give and receive.

Such experiences reinforce after decades of research and dozens of movements for social change
what I have long suspected. It's not just contemporary industrial society that is dysfunctional, it is civilization itself. That we humans are born, that we are creatures of the land and sea and the stars, that we are related to animals, related to the plants. And that our well-being and being of the planet depends on our continuing in our present location in the natural world. In
considering that celebrate the coming of John Zerzan anthology dealing with the best critiques of civilization civilized people. Here the reader will find the questions that need to be asked and the insights, seeking to be nurtured if humankind and the natural world as we know them to flourish in the future.
This book is so important.

- Chellis Glendinning
Chinayó, New Mexico
26th July 1998

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

How Long For Bad Black Eye To Heal

Against Civilization - Book Cover

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