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Nokkie's blog: "Random Shit"

created on 07/10/2008  |  http://fubar.com/random-shit/b230578  |  1 followers
Date: 2008-07-02, 2:35PM EDT
Do you love to play Super Mario Brothers on the Classic Nintendo System? Do you like to get tagged from behind while you do it? This is the post for you then. You must know your way around the game before we meet, must be open to anal sex, also able to fake an orgasm is a plus. I will send you the address to a hotel and a room number. When you arrive the door will be open. Please come in close and lock the door and close the shades if they are still open. I will be in the bathroom and the door will be closed. Turn on the TV and the Nintendo. Remove all of your clothing. Turn off all lights in the room and kneel down on the bed so you are directly in the light of the TV. You need to be facing the TV with your butt in the air pointed toward the pillows on the bed. Press the start button on the controller when you are ready. I will hear the sound and turn the light off in the bathroom and come out. You will not look directly at me, only look at the TV. When the first level starts I will begin to finger you and lick you. I will be using lots of lube as well. When you reach the end of level one, make sure to trigger the fireworks. This is vital to the entire experience. I must hear the fireworks. When level 2 begins and Mario walks into the pipe, I will penetrate you. You may say things like, "MORE", "HARDER", "YES", "FUCK ME", but nothing else. I will continue having sex until the level ends. DO NOT take the secret level skip. If you die I will pull out and spank you until the level restarts. When you reach the flag you must again trigger the fireworks, and also orgasm. I will pull out. When the 1-3 starts I will penetrate your ass. You are allowed to say something like "OH GOD", "YES", OR "IT HURTS" no other conversation is allowed. When level 1-4 starts I will alternate between holes as I see fit. You may beg me to cum inside or outside of you, depending on what you want. When boss falls and you reach the princess I will pull out and blow my load where you have convinced me I want too. You may then say something like "Thanks", "It was great", "I loved it", "Don't stop" If I am impressed you may continue playing and I will continue to pleasure you. If I am not, I will turn the Nintendo Off and return to the bathroom. At this time you may clean your self with the towel that is beside the bed. Turn the lights on, redress yourself and leave. I may come back out and talk to you as you dress but the conversation will most likely be short and revolve around scheduling another time to get together. Credit Goes To: Jaxi ♥ the n0kkie
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@ fubar She Found This Lil' Gem! Now, Go Love Up On Her!! She's A Wickedly Awesome Woman! Tell Her, Her Boyfriend Sent Ya'!

In FoodMax ..

Ok So @ 3:30Pm Me, Matt and Patrick Were In FoodMax Looking For Some Munchies I Found This Cart Full Of Bouncy Balls Right .. So, I Grab One and Beging Bouncing It All Around The Store .. Like, Where We Went, So Did My Lil' Ball And I Was Bouncing It and Playing With It I Was'nt Hitting People .. Other Than Matt .. With It Or Annoying People .. There Were About 4 or 5 People Working .. So I Figure All Was Good .. Oh, But How I Was Wrong .. Over The Inter-Com, I Hear "Will The Person Bouncing The Ball In The Store, Stop It?" So, I Immediatly Stop .. Look Up .. and Yell "Maybe!" ..... So ... I Put My Lil' Bouncy Buddy Away and We Leave, After Grabbing A Bag Of Doritos .. I Was Sad .. Ask: Patrick
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@ fubar He'll Tell You xD
The author of this declaration is anonymous.. Please feel free to sign this and declare your independence. A DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE FROM THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Through my signature below I hereby withdraw my consent to be ruled by the organization that has called itself the Government of the United States of America.. A government is empowered through the consent of the governed to serve a sacred purpose, namely, to create a bright and sustainable future for its people and a biodiverse garden of its region. This purpose is possible.. If a government no longer serves its intended purpose then it is proper that each individual formally withdraw his or her consent to be ruled by that government.. Through a consistent stream of actions the United States Government has proved itself to be corrupt, having turned away from serving its original purpose. The United States Government has therefore failed, and is de facto illegitimate. Consequently, all of its authorities over me are hereby removed and the United States Government is hereby disbanded in its entirety. All branches, the legislative, executive and judicial branches, including all offices and resources, political, military, informational and financial, are hereby disenfranchised and replaced by local, self-organizing, bioregional governments and currencies that promote sustainable infrastructures and demonstrably serve the principles of integrity, transparency, interdependence, consciousness and the sustainable well being of their entire ecology.. Human beings carry an inalienable responsibility for choosing to whom or what they pledge their allegiance. From this moment forward I no longer pledge my allegiance to the organization that has called itself the Government of the United States of America. We are dissociated. I disallow that organization to legislate, adjudicate, use money, or make agreements in my name, either nationally or internationally. I hereby withdraw my franchise from the United States Government and I no longer submit myself to its authority. I hereby abandon my United States Passport as worthless, null and void because through its own actions the United States Government has invalidated itself.. This document recognizes that the United States Government has: Irredeemably abolished itself by no longer fulfilling its true purpose. This document announces that I take my authority back from that failed organization. The United States Government no longer has authority to represent me, tax me, detain me, question me, or in any way rule over me. It can no longer take any actions in my name. From this moment forward I take back my autonomy. I hereby declare my independence from the organization that has called itself the Government of the United States of America.. Although I alone, without reason or circumstance, am responsible for my decision to withdraw my franchise and allegiance from the organization that has called itself the Government of the United States of America, I am willing to name examples of how this organization has betrayed the purpose for which it was originally created: 1. The Government of the United States of America (herein referred to as the Government) has consistently legislated in favor of a carbon-based economy that multiplies corporate profits while disregarding the increases in greenhouse gas concentrations to the point where the future of all of humanity is now seriously threatened by the consequences of global warming.. 2. The Government has promoted the use of nuclear powered electric generation plants creating millions of tons of lethal nuclear waste products that can never be safely stored, and creating decommissioned power plants that remain radioactive for eternity.. 3. The Government has abused its leadership position in the world by promoting fear-based military force as the international culture of America, rather than a culture of innovation, compassion, respect, and mutual support of humanity.. 4. The Government over and over again, and still now is using illegal DU (Depleted Uranium) weapons and devices in direct opposition to signed United Nations agreements, degrading the United States of America to a renegade country, likely to have its leadership regime brought to war crimes trials and capitally punished.. 5. The Government has promoted an unsustainable consumerism culture that multiplies corporate profits while devouring the future's natural resources and producing mountains, rivers and seas of toxic unrecyclable wastes. The consumer economy never did have a future and still the government promoted it wholeheartedly.. 6. The Government has promoted covert military actions and subterfuge that includes traffic in illegal drugs, illegal weapons trade, assassinations, illegal takeovers of corporations and governments, and ruthless competition rather than intelligent cooperation or creative collaboration. 7. The Government has allowed itself to be infiltrated and corrupted by corporate and elite regimes that now direct the branches of Government to serve purposes contrary to the true and proper purpose of government.. 8. The Government has turned over control of the currency of the United States of America (the original world currency) to private individuals who manipulate it for their own personal benefit rather than for the benefit of the world.. 9. The Government has promoted a system of education that keeps people stupid rather than developing their innate potential and well being so they can create satisfying lives, fulfilling relationships and loving families in the 21st Century. The Government has allowed corporations and organized religions to control school curriculums, and has permitted drugs, gangs and guns to define the school experience for many children.. 10. The Government has promoted economy over humanity in a value system that shamelessly sponsors injustice, inequity, and slavery, not only in America but around the world, regarding people in developing nations not as brothers and sisters but as sweatshop slaves for producing cheap clothes and the latest technological devices.. 11. The Government has designed cities and towns around automobiles and roads rather than around people, cutting people off from their own community and trapping people in suburbs that are not sustainable.. 12. The Government has consistently sponsored an imbalanced budget and has accrued a national debt over one trillion dollars that future generations must somehow pay back, meanwhile losing track of an additional trillion dollars.. 13. The Government has greedily destroyed the future of civilization by developing an infrastructure, energy, food, housing and transportation systems relying entirely on consuming vast quantities of hydrocarbons that exist in limited supply, thus building a dangerous house of cards that will now tumble down as oil, gas and coal supplies dwindle. If half of the war budget would have been redirected towards developing renewable power for the last twenty years, the entire country would be oil free by now.. 14. The Government has promoted a diet of fat-saturated fast-foods, and hormone and antibiotic saturated beef, pigs, poultry, and dairy products that endanger the health and general well being of its people, ground water and farmlands. The Government has also promoted fishing grounds to be exhausted to near extinction, and promotes deforestation and dependence on pesticides and fertilizers that undermine foreign economies but makes huge profits for corporations.. 15. The Government has promoted the so-called patenting and engineering of the genetic designs of life forms to be used for the profit of corporations while endangering the future of the humanity.. 16. The Government has promoted the introduction of genetically modified organisms into the general food chain for the profit of corporations while endangering the future of humanity.. 17. The Government has used military force, assassination, and political manipulation to overthrow other governments as a desperate attempt to control remaining oil supplies for the purpose of maintaining the illusionary value of a world petro-dollar to assure profit for the corporations rather than assuring a bright future for the people.. 18. The Government has promoted a medical establishment that profits pharmaceutical corporations and has blocked the development of less profitable but more humanistic, holistic and intuitive healing modalities.. 19. The Government has persistently implemented legislation and presidential orders to override constitutional rights, and has built and staffed over 600 new prison camps across the country prepared to imprison citizens who might be regarded as the enemy of Government.. These and other actions reveal that the United States Government has irredeemably abolished itself by no longer fulfilling its original and true purpose. [Please note that although I am posting this in a blog, I do not agree with the assumption that the author seems to make that the U.S Government's true and original purpose was to be "for the people". The idea that "the people" were ever free from the government is one of the most fundemental lies of this culture. That lie is a very important one to break free of, this government never gave a shit about the people and only cared about keeping them happy (i.e. manipulating truths and fooling the people with lies) so they wouldn't revolt. For anyone who is not familar with the "people's history" of the United States (as opposed to the Elite's history -that which you got in school) please read Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States".]

No Master

No Masters If you liked school, you'll love work. The cruel, absurd abuses of power, the self-satisfied authority that the teachers and principals lorded over you, the intimidation and ridicule of your classmates don't end at graduation. Those things are all present in the adult world, only more so. If you thought you lacked freedom before, wait until you have to answer to shift leaders, managers, owners, landlords, creditors, tax collectors, city councils, draft boards, law courts, and police. When you get out of school you may escape the jurisdiction of some authorities, but you enter the control of even more domineering ones. Do you enjoy being controlled by others who don't understand or care about your wants and needs? Do you get anything out of obeying the instructions of employers, the restrictions of landlords, the laws of magistrates, people who have powers over you that you would never have given them willingly? How is it that they get all this power? The answer is hierarchy. Hierarchy is a value system in which your worth measured by the number of people and things you control, and how well you obey those above you. Weight is exerted downward through the power structure: everyone is forced to accept and conform to this system by everyone else. You're afraid to disobey those above you because they can bring to bear against you the power of everyone and everything under them. You're afraid to abdicate your power over those below you because they might end up above you. In our hierarchical system, we're all so busy trying to protect ourselves from each other that we never have a chance to stop and think if this is really the best way our society could be organized. If we could think about it, we'd probably agree that it isn't; for we all know happiness comes from control over our own lives, not other people's lives. And as long as we're busy competing for control over others, we're bound to be the victims of control ourselves. Even the ones at the very top of the ladder are controlled by their position: they have to work around the clock to maintain it. One false move, and they could end up at the bottom. It is our hierarchical system that teaches us from childhood to accept the power of any authority figure, regardless of whether it is in our best interest or not. We learn to bow instinctively before anyone who claims to be more important than we are. It is hierarchy that makes homophobia common among poor people in the U.S.A.—they're desperate to feel more valuable, more significant than somebody. It is hierarchy at work when two hundred hardcore kids go to a rock club (already a mistake, but that's a subject for another article) to see a band, and for some stupid reason the clubowner won't let them perform: there are two hundred and six people at the club, two hundred and five of whom want the band to play, but they all accept the decision of the clubowner just because he is older and owns the place (i.e. has more financial clout, and thus more legal clout). It is hierarchical values that are responsible for racism ("white people are better than black people"), classism ("rich people are better than poor people"), sexism ("men are better than women"), and a thousand other prejudices that are deeply ingrained in our society. It is hierarchy that makes rich people look at poor people as if they aren't even human, and vice versa. It pits employer against employee, manager against worker, teacher against student, making people struggle against each other rather than work together to help each other; separated this way, they can't benefit from each other's skills and ideas and abilities, but must live in jealousy and fear of them. It is hierarchy at work when your boss insults you or makes sexual advances at you and you can't do anything about it, just as it is when police flaunt their power over you. For power does make people cruel and heartless, and submission does make people cowardly and stupid: and most people in a hierarchical system partake in both. Hierarchical values are responsible for our destruction of the natural environment and the exploitation of animals: led by the capitalist West, our species seeks control over anything we can get our claws on, at any cost to ourselves or others. And it is hierarchical values that send us to war, fighting for power over each other, inventing more and more powerful weapons until finally the whole world teeters on the edge of nuclear annihilation. But what can we do about hierarchy? Isn't that just the way the world works? Or are there other ways that people could interact, other values we could live by? Hierarchy . . . and Anarchy Resurrecting anarchism as a personal approach to life. Stop thinking of anarchism as just another "world order," just another social system. From where we all stand, in this very dominated, very controlled world, it is impossible to imagine living without any authorities, without laws or governments. No wonder anarchism isn't usually taken seriously as a large-scale political or social program: no one can imagine what it would really be like, let alone how to achieve it—not even the anarchists themselves. Instead, think of anarchism as an individual orientation to yourself and others, as a personal approach to life. That isn't impossible to imagine. Conceived in these terms, what would anarchism be? It would be a decision to think for yourself rather than following blindly. It would be a rejection of hierarchy, a refusal to accept the "god given" authority of any nation, law, or other force as being more significant than your own authority over yourself. It would be an instinctive distrust of those who claim to have some sort of rank or status above the others around them, and an unwillingness to claim such status over others for yourself. Most of all, it would be a refusal to place responsibility for yourself in the hands of others: it would be the demand that each of us be able to choose our own destiny. According to this definition, there are a great deal more anarchists than it seemed, though most wouldn't refer to themselves as such. For most people, when they think about it, want to have the right to live their own lives, to think and act as they see fit. Most people trust themselves to figure out what they should do more than they trust any authority to dictate it to them. Almost everyone is frustrated when they find themselves pushing against faceless, impersonal power. You don't want to be at the mercy of governments, bureaucracies, police, or other outside forces, do you? Surely you don't let them dictate your entire life. Don't you do what you want to, what you believe in, at least whenever you can get away with it? In our everyday lives, we all are anarchists. Whenever we make decisions for ourselves, whenever we take responsibility for our own actions rather than deferring to some higher power, we are putting anarchism into practice. So if we are all anarchists by nature, why do we always end up accepting the domination of others, even creating forces to rule over us? Wouldn't you rather figure out how to coexist with your fellow human beings by working it out directly between yourselves, rather than depending on some external set of rules? Remember, the system they accept is the one you must live under: if you want your freedom, you can't afford to not be concerned about whether those around you demand control of their lives or not. Do we really need masters to command and control us? In the West, for thousands of years, we have been sold centralized state power and hierarchy in general on the premise that we do. We've all been taught that without police, we would all kill each other; that without bosses, no work would ever get done; that without governments, civilization itself would fall to pieces. Is all this true? Certainly, it's true that today little work gets done when the boss isn't watching, chaos ensues when governments fall, and violence sometimes occurs when the police aren't around. But are these really indications that there is no other way we could organize society? Isn't it possible that workers won't get anything done unless they are under observation because they are used to not doing anything without being prodded—more than that, because they resent being inspected, instructed, condescended to by their managers, and don't want to do anything for them that they don't have to? Perhaps if they were working together for a common goal, rather than being paid to take orders, working towards objectives that they have no say in and that don't interest them much, they would be more proactive. Not to say that everyone is ready or able to do such a thing today; but our laziness is conditioned rather than natural, and in a different environment, we might find that people don't need bosses to get things done. And as for police being necessary to maintain the peace: we won't discuss the ways in which the role of "law enforcer" brings out the most brutal aspects of human beings, and how police brutality doesn't exactly contribute to peace. How about the effects on civilians living in a police-protected state? Once the police are no longer a direct manifestation of the desires of the community they serve (and that happens quickly, whenever a police force is established: they become a force external to the rest of society, an outside authority), they are a force acting coercively on the people of that society. Violence isn't just limited to physical harm: any relationship that is established by force, such as the one between police and civilians, is a violent relationship. When you are acted upon violently, you learn to act violently back. Isn't it possible, then, that the implicit threat of police on every street corner—of the near omnipresence of uniformed, impersonal representatives of state power—contributes to tension and violence, rather than dispelling them? If that doesn't seem likely to you, and you are middle class and/or white, ask a poor black or Hispanic man how the presence of police makes him feel. When the standard forms of human interaction all revolve around hierarchical power, when human intercourse so often comes down to giving and receiving orders (at work, at school, in the family, in legal courts), how can we expect to have no violence in our system? People are used to using force against each other in their daily lives, the force of authoritarian power; of course using physical force cannot be far behind in such a system. Perhaps if we were more used to treating each other as equals, to creating relationships based upon equal concern for each other's needs, we wouldn't see so many people resort to physical violence against each other. And what about government control? Without it, would our society fall into pieces, and our lives with it? Certainly, things would be a great deal different without governments than they are now—but is that necessarily a bad thing? Is our modern society really the best of all possible worlds? Is it worth it to grant masters and rulers so much control over our lives, out of fear of trying anything different? Besides, we can't claim that we need government control to prevent mass bloodshed, because it is governments that have perpetrated the greatest slaughters of all: in wars, in holocausts, and cultures. And it may be that when governments break down, many people lose their lives in the resulting chaos and infighting. But this fighting is almost always between other power-hungry hierarchical groups, other would-be governors and rulers. If we were to reject hierarchy absolutely, and refuse to serve any force above ourselves, there would no longer be any large scale wars or holocausts. That would be a responsibility each of us would have to take on equally, to collectively refuse to recognize any power as worth serving, to swear allegiance to nothing but ourselves and our fellow human beings. But if we all were to do it, we would never see another world war again. Of course, even if a world entirely without hierarchy is possible, we should not have any illusions that any of us will live to see it realized. That should not even be our concern: for it is foolish to arrange your life so that it revolves around something that you will never be able to experience. We should, rather, recognize the patterns of submission and domination in our own lives, and, to the best of our ability, break free of them. We should put the anarchist ideal (no masters, no slaves) into effect in our daily lives however we can. Every time one of us remembers not to accept the authority of the powers that be at face value, each time one of us is able to escape the system of domination for a moment (whether it is by getting away with something forbidden by a teacher or boss, relating to a member of a different social stratum as an equal, etc.), that is a victory for the individual and a blow against hierarchy. Do you still believe that a hierarchy-free society is impossible? There are plenty of examples throughout human history: the bushmen of the Kalahari desert still live together without authorities, never trying to force or command each other to do things, but working together and granting each other freedom and autonomy. Sure, their society is being destroyed by our more warlike one—but that isn't to say that an egalitarian society could not exist that was extremely hostile to, and well-defended against, the encroachments of external power! William Burroughs writes about an anarchist pirates' stronghold a hundred years ago that was just that. If you need an example closer to your daily life, remember the last time you gathered with your friends to relax on a Friday night. Some of you brought food, some of you brought entertainment, some provided other things, but nobody kept track of who owed what to whom. You did things as a group and enjoyed yourselves; things actually got done, but nobody was forced to do anything, and nobody assumed the position of chief. We have these moments of non-capitalist, non-coercive, non-hierarchical interaction in our lives constantly, and these are the times when we most enjoy the company of others, when we get the most out of other people; but somehow it doesn't occur to us to demand that our society work this way, as well as our friendships and love affairs. Sure, it's a lofty goal to ask that it does—but let's dare to reach for high goals, let's not fucking settle for anything less than the best in our lives! Each of us only gets a few years on this planet to enjoy life; let's try to work together to do it, rather than fighting amongst each other for miserable prizes like status and power. "Anarchism" is the revolutionary idea that no one is more qualified than you are to decide what your life will be. —It means trying to figure out how to work together to meet our individual needs, how to work with each other rather than "for" or against each other. And when this is impossible, it means preferring strife to submission and domination. —It means not valuing any system or ideology above the people it purports to serve, not valuing anything theoretical above the real things in this world. It means being faithful to real human beings (and animals, etc.), fighting for ourselves and for each other, not out of "responsibility," not for "causes" or other intangible concepts. —It means not forcing your desires into a hierarchical order, either, but accepting and embracing all of them, accepting yourself. It means not trying to force the self to abide by any external laws, not trying to restrict your emotions to the predictable or the practical, not pushing your instincts and desires into boxes: for there is no cage large enough to accommodate the human soul in all its flights, all its heights and depths. —It means refusing to put the responsibility for your happiness in anyone else's hands, whether that be parents, lovers, employers, or society itself. It means taking the pursuit of meaning and joy in your life upon your own shoulders. For what else should we pursue, if not happiness? If something isn't valuable because we find meaning and joy in it, then what could possibly make it important? How could abstractions like "responsibility," "order," or "propriety" possibly be more important than the real needs of the people who invented them? Should we serve employers, parents, the State, God, capitalism, moral law before ourselves? Who was it that taught you we should, anyway?

A Secret World

There is a Secret World Concealed Within this One. The lives we lead, and the lives we wish we led. This world, the so-called "real world," is just a front. Pull back the curtain and you'll see the libraries are all filled with runaways writing novels, the highways are humming with escapees and sympathizers, all the receptionists and sensible mothers are straining at the leash for a chance to show how alive they still are. . . and all that talk of practicality and responsibility is just threats and bluffing to keep us from reaching out our hands to find that heaven lies in reach before us. You can taste it in the shock and roar of a first, unexpected kiss, or in the blood in your mouth that instant after an accident when you realize you're still alive. It blows in the wind you feel on the rooftops of a really reckless night of adventure. You hear it in the magic of your favorite songs, how they lift and transport you in ways that no science or psychology could ever account for. It might be you've seen evidence of it scratched into bathroom walls in a code without a key, or you've been able to make out a pale reflection of it in the movies they make to keep us entertained. It's in between the words when we speak of our desires and aspirations, still lurking somewhere beneath the limitations of being "practical" and "realistic." When poets and radicals stay up until sunrise, wracking their brains for the perfect sequence of words or deeds to fill hearts (or cities) with fire, they're trying to find a hidden entrance to it. When children escape out the window to go wandering late at night, or freedom fighters search for a weakness in government fortifications, they're trying to sneak into it—for they know better than us where the doors are hidden. When teenagers vandalize a billboard to provoke all-night chases with the police, or anarchists interrupt an orderly demonstration to smash the windows of a corporate chain store, they're trying to storm its gates. When you're making love and you discover a new sensation or region of your lover's body, and the two of you feel like explorers discovering a new part of the world on a par with a desert oasis or the coast of an unknown continent, as if you are the first ones to reach the north pole or the moon, you are charting its frontiers. It's not a safer place than this one—on the contrary, it is the sensation of danger there that brings us back to life: the feeling that for once, for one moment that seems to eclipse the past and future, there is something real at stake. Maybe you stumbled into it by accident, once, amazed at what you found. The old world splintered behind and inside you, and no physician or metaphysician could put it back together again. Everything before became trivial, irrelevant, ridiculous as the horizons suddenly telescoped out around you and undreamt-of new paths offered themselves. And perhaps you swore that you would never return, that you would live out the rest of your life electrified by that urgency, in the thrill of discovery and transformation—but return you did. Common sense dictates that this world can only be experienced temporarily, that it is just the shock of transition, and no more; but the myths we share around our fires tell a different story: we hear of women and men who stayed there for weeks, years, who never returned, who lived and died there as heroes. We know, because we feel it in that atavistic chamber of our hearts that holds the memory of freedom from a time before time, that this secret world is near, waiting for us. You can see it in the flash in our eyes, in the abandon of our dances and love affairs, in the protest or party that gets out of hand. You're not the only one trying to find it. We're out here, too . . . some of us are even waiting there for you. And you should know that anything you've ever done or considered doing to get there is not crazy, but beautiful, noble, necessary. Revolution is simply the idea we could enter that secret world and never return; or, better, that we could burn away this one, to reveal the one beneath entirely.

Rejecting Civilization

REJECTING CIVILIZATION "We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors; we borrow the earth from our children" ~Native American Proverb "The earth does not belong to humans; humans belong to the earth" A common theme to most in our culture is that the earth was put here for human beings (or at least those among the civilized); that humans are the peak of evolution. Most in this culture tend to believe that humans have somehow evolved beyond the limits of what we so often call "Nature". They believe that humans are separate from all other animals, and in fact often fall into this belief that we are not animals -when nothing could be further from the truth. Humans are made of flesh, of bones and of blood. We eat and we drink; and we piss and we shit. We are organic material that comes from the dirt and returns to the dirt. In the words of Tyler Durden, "we are all part of the same compost heap Yet, the average bloke in our culture tends to believe that although we are made of such organic materials; we are still separate from that. The "weak flesh" of the body -that which decays- is often shrugged off as a mere temporary vessel for a spirit or ego that is some how separate from that flesh and that we are only our minds and our thoughts. The belief goes that we are superior to both "Nature" itself and the many plants and animals around us because of our "intelligence", or because of our "language". It is believed that only humans can communicate with one another and that we are the sole possessors of this so-called "intelligence" So what is this "intelligence" then that makes humans so great and special. I suppose one might expect the answer lies in our neat little innovations and technologies; our ways to manipulate and use the natural landbases to our sole advantage. For example we may hear that agriculture saved humans from some dark and grueling existence in a wild and untamed world; a world where one had to live in caves and carry a spear; an environment that was cruel and where one never knew where danger was lurking; a horrible existence of having to spend all day searching for food. And so one day some brilliant young hunter-gatherer realized that if we tilled the soil and we planted seeds we could grow our own food and not depend upon the food that nature provided. And with this they discovered, too, that if you captured animals and bred them you would never have to hunt again.... Intelligent indeed then, it would seem. But how intelligent was such a shift in finding sustenance? Was the hunter-gather life really so cruel in the first place? The answer to both these questions can be found in the answer we commonly know as "no". According to a large percent of anthropologists -those who study human beings and their ancestors through time and space and in relation to physical character, environmental and social relations, and culture- most hunter-gatherer cultures "worked" as little as 2-4 hours per day satisfying the needs of themselves and their community while the average agriculturist would most often from "sun up to sun down One could also question whether such a thing as "work" even existed in these hunter-gatherer cultures. The act of hunting was looked at as a ritual and was done not in vain, but spiritually –the same way they experienced all parts of their life. How many people that go to work today look at their job as being a spiritual experience? In agricultural society, one had to do what could literally be called "back-breaking work". One would have to spend most of their day in the field tending to their crops. They would need to till the soils, and irrigate their fields. They would become very much dependent on the crops to grow. And so, the tending was very important to be kept up with daily Hunter-gatherers certainly were depending on the growth of food as well. And they were dependent on the animals of the forest to be abundant. Certainly times would come when they would have to move to a new area when food became scarce. But one must ask whether this is a hardship or a convenience. Indeed if we think about this -it is a convenience. The hardship lies in the reliance of one single area. In other words nomadic tribes had a freedom that the sedentary cultures did not. For the nomadic hunter-gather, one must only pack up their limited possessions and move on to the another landbase with the knowledge and way of living that allowed them to simply hunt and gather wild foods. For if the agriculturist's -a sedentary culture- crops did not produce then the community could not simply pick up and go and would go through much hardship. A lack of ability to survive in the wild held them from being able to hunt and gather for their food, and moving was more difficult because one needs more possessions in order to farm and many kept domesticated animals that would need to be herded with the "tribe" Maybe you are thinking that although it may have been tougher, it made way for great new technologies! A sign of civilized humans true superiority over the rest of the natural world including these savage primitives! I suppose if we are talking about the ability to grow and expand and essentially to conquer... then yes, superior indeed but, what of intelligence? So the question then becomes, "was it smart to create these great new technologies; to inhibit the growth of cities via agriculture; to expand and conquer?" Let's look at what's come from such things: New technologies that grew out of agricultural societies were meant for agriculture. Their purpose was to make agriculture more efficient, and in some cases easier, but still wound up just as time consuming because you were now trying to be more productive and grow more food; and you are still very much dependent upon the success of each crop. These technologies essentially created an ability to grow ever so much more food and in turn gave societies the green light to make some extra babies. (Part of being settled down means you can have as many babies as you can feed and not have to worry about traveling long distances with them) With people settling down and populations increasing -cities would form. As well, with more surplus foods being available certain kinds of rule had to be established to protect that food and find ways of distributing it. Systems had to be created and controlled. In come kingships or hierarchies. With kingships you were able to have a few people benefiting from the now established systems while the rest would have to work all day to keep that system together and working This new population growth and establishment of cities is something akin to a cancerous growth upon the land. The more people living in one area over extended periods of time -and growing no less- means a need to expand and to use that land for the needs of the city dwellers. This wreaks serious havoc upon the landbase. The need for additional agriculture means the need to till more soil. Since that soil often lies upon the forest floor; there is then the need for deforestation -the cruel destruction of the natural world Another aspect of the growth of cities is warfare. Warfare comes most commonly when the one city or empire feels it must expand its territory -and it must. The reason it must is because cities in and of themselves are not sustainable in the long term. Cities require the use of the land outside it's own borders in order to build, grow or simply sustain. As a cancer is to the skin, a city is to the landbase. It spreads its tentacles and destroys what it touches, forever needing to span further outwards. And so this often will mean coming into contact with other cities which also must expand. So the war is really a battle for "resources". And it's not just other cities that war is made upon but, the many indigenous tribes that stand in the way of such expansion. And that is to say nothing of the fact that the real war is being made upon the very earth herself This is where other new technologies came into play; the need for weaponry. And so the growth of technologies was meant for either raping the land more efficiently or waging war upon your fellow humans more efficiently. Smart? Intelligent? Humans being are part of nature and depend upon her existence. What intelligent creature would wage war upon that which it depended on most? Ask yourself this: "would a beaver cut down every tree in the forest? Would a bear kill every salmon in the river until there was none left? What intelligent animal destroys its own land and food in which they are dependent upon? Would that creature not lack intelligence if it was to destroy all which it needs in order for the survival of not only itself, but of its children?" This is not at all to say that humans in general are dumb. Certainly they are not. Humans are a beautiful and intelligent creature capable of wondrous things. The humans I speak of here are those of the civilized. Those who have followed a path that is much like that of jumping off a cliff and believing you are flying. The ground is coming fast and yet you continue to believe that you are flying; refusing to look below you at your impending doom. And those that do see the ground believe that the very same thing that led them to think they could fly in the first place will be what will save them. In other words the belief that: although technology has brought humans (and the earth) to this point, it is technology that is going to get us out of this mess –pure insanity Many of those living in modern civilization easily detest such notions of hunter-gathers being better equipped at living on the earth. They will detest any positive outlook of tribal societies as mere romanticizing -despite large amounts of evidence showing how efficient and effective their economies and societies actually were. People look upon anyone who suggests taking into consideration these facts as wanting to "go back". This statement that "we can not go back" comes largely from the arrogant concept of progress. Our culture has been led to believe that civilization is progress; that we are moving forward towards something. Today that common belief in progress stems from the idea that civilized humans will soon be living in some sort of, as Jerry Mander author of, "In the Absence of the Sacred" has called it, "technotopia"; a world in which trees will be made in test tubes and our genes will be manipulated or machines will be made that allow us to live longer or forever; a world where robots do all of our labor intensive activities; and a world were people live on mars and the moon. The civilized idea of progress is abstract from ourselves and the living world around us. Instead of considering progress as how well the society works and how happy the members of that society are -instead of considering the effect this particular way of life has on the land as well as future inhabitants of that land -human and nonhuman- progress is measured by how efficiently we are able to clear cut a forest, or vacuum the oceans of her fish, or "develop"- read destroy- the land. Progress is measured by the growth of cities and populations. Progress is measured by the technologies created by that society. In the eyes of the civilized: personal computers –which separate us from a real and natural environment- are progress; cars and SUV's –which require massive destruction of the environment that once gave us birth and now gives us life- are progress; iPods ™ -which keep us shut out from a reality we no longer enjoy; or block out the sounds of the other machines; or even of other humans we no longer wish to enter into relationships with; and block out -when in "Nature"- the language of birds and bees and other musical creatures- are progress; televisions –which display false realities and again separate us from the real and natural world; which help us to cope with a reality in which we no longer enjoy; which is an opiate for the working masses; that displays mass propaganda from the corporate and governmental machines telling you to consume your life away while not questioning authority- are seen as progress. None of which truly enhances our lives; and certainly does not enhance the life of the natural world in which we are dependent upon It's not unexpected that people who live among this culture have a problem with rejecting the very concept of civilization. We've been raised since our very birth to believe and accept that this is the One True Way to live. That other ways of living are simply not right, or inferior. As Daniel Quinn, author of "Ishmael", has stated, "there is no one right way to live." The concept of this being the One True Way was taught to us by our parents, pounded into us throughout school and of course via TV. And by the time we make it out into the so-called "real–world" we have no other choice but to accept it if we wish to survive. In other words we have no choice but to "grow up" and "get a job"… that is if we wish to put a roof over our heads, food on our tables, and clothes on our back. We are dependent on this way of life in order to survive, but survival is sold to us at the cost of our lives So how then does one break such bonds and beliefs? How can we change the way we think and live when we've been conditioned to believe in the One True Way –civilization. For starters we must begin to question every piece of information we receive. We must question all the basic assumptions and memes that have been ingrained into our psyches. We must look into our hearts for the answers to all our questions. We must follow our hearts closely and search out new ways of living. We must reject civilization and move beyond it and teach others the same. We must start acting to protect what bits of the natural world are still alive and work towards bringing life back into the areas that civilization has infected and destroyed with its machines, concretes, and asphalt. On a planet that is reaching a tipping point ecologically we must do this as unwaveringly as possible and by whatever means necessary. We must listen to not only our own hearts, but to the many voices of the land that are speaking constantly around us This of course is not an easy task. You may be ridiculed for not "going with the flow." This is to be expected, like Derrick Jensen, author of "Endgame: the Problem Civilization", has said "the culture and most of its members are insane" –quite literally. The path you are taking will be a "radical" one; one that will not be understood by all. Nevertheless there is a growing understanding among many that a radical change is necessary if we are to save our planet from its impending doom -forced upon her by civilization. Many are still in their beginning stages -only now beginning to wake up and see the destruction and the realistic and very sad possibilities of ecological collapse Does this mean we should just find a forest and run away? No. It means we must make a stand. We must fight. We must unlearn our civilized ways. We must bring these realities to the table everywhere we go. We must work towards change. As creatures of the earth and as members of a species guilty of such atrocities –we must take responsibility; we must relearn and reestablish a relationship to the earth and act as though we are a part of her –which we very much are. We must learn to respect the entire community of life from the greatest whale to the smallest insect… It's been said "the meek shall inherit the earth"; but how can that be true without those are not willing to have such patience as to just sit by and watch the earth being raped; without those who are not easily imposed upon and submissive; without those who will stand and fight on the side of the earth, the giver of life. For if the meek are to borrow the earth from their children -for if there is even an earth to "borrow", then more than ever is there a need for those willing to fight to protect her.. composed by fellow thought criminal: KOYAANISQATSI - ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
The Contents of Your Daily Life How many hours a day do you spend in front of a television screen? A computer screen? Behind an automobile windscreen? All three screens combined? What are you being screened from? How much of your life comes at you through a screen, vicariously? Is watching things as exciting as doing things? Do you have enough time to do all the things that you want to? Do you have enough energy to? Why? And how many hours a day do you sleep? How are you affected by standardized time, designed solely to synchronize your movements with those of millions of other people? How long do you ever go without knowing what time it is? Who or what controls your minutes and hours? The minutes and hours that add up to your life? Are you saving time? Saving it up for what? Can you put a value on a beautiful day, when the birds are singing and people are walking around together? How many dollars an hour does it take to pay you to stay inside and sell things or file papers? What can you get later that will make up for this day of your life? How are you affected by being in crowds, by being surrounded by anonymous masses? Do you find yourself blocking your emotional responses to other human beings? And who prepares your meals? Do you ever eat by yourself? Do you ever eat standing up? How much do you know about what you eat and where it comes from? How much do you trust it? What are we deprived of by labor-saving devices? By thought-saving devices? How are you affected by the requirements of efficiency, which place value on the product rather than the process, on the future rather than the present, the present moment that is getting shorter and shorter as we speed faster and faster into the future? What are we speeding towards? Are we saving time? Saving it up for what? How are you affected by being moved around in prescribed paths, in elevators, buses, subways, escalators, on highways and sidewalks? By moving, working, and living in two- and three-dimensional grids? How are you affected by being organized, immobilized, and scheduled rather than wandering, roaming freely and spontaneously? Scavenging? (Shoplifting?) How much freedom of movement do you have--freedom to move through space, to move as far as you want, in new and unexplored directions? And how are you affected by waiting? Waiting in line, waiting in traffic, waiting to eat, waiting for the bus, waiting to urinate--learning to punish and ignore your spontaneous urges? How are you affected by holding back your desires? By sexual repression, by the delay or denial of pleasure, starting in childhood, along with the suppression of everything in you that is spontaneous, everything that evidences your wild nature, your membership in the animal kingdom? Is pleasure dangerous? Could danger be joyous? Do you ever need to see the sky? (Can you see many stars in it any more?) Do you ever need to see water, leaves, foliage, animals? Glinting, glimmering, moving? Is that why you have a pet, an aquarium, houseplants? Or are television and video your glinting, glimmering, moving? How much of your life comes at you through a screen, vicariously? If your life was made into a movie, would you watch it? How do you feel in situations of enforced passivity? How are you affected by a non-stop assault of symbolic communication--audio, visual, print, billboard, video, radio, robotic voices--as you wander through a forest of signs? What are they urging upon you? Do you ever need solitude, quiet, contemplation? Do you remember it? Thinking on your own, rather than reacting to stimuli? Is it hard to look away? Is looking away the very thing that is not permitted? Where can you go to find silence and solitude? Not white noise, but pure silence? Not loneliness, but gentle solitude? How often have you stopped to ask yourself questions like these? Do you find yourself committing acts of symbolic violence? Do you ever feel lonely in a way that words cannot even express? Do you sometimes feel yourself ready to LOSE CONTROL?

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