Rogue Highway explains how society was affected by The Great Blurring.
Thought provoking. Most great changes don't arrive with trumpets.
[Photo by Luiz Gonzaga at Unsplash]
Commentary by Michael Wade, consultant, speaker, and author of "Pilate's Magician."
Rogue Highway explains how society was affected by The Great Blurring.
Thought provoking. Most great changes don't arrive with trumpets.
[Photo by Luiz Gonzaga at Unsplash]
For thousands of years, human civilizations did something unimaginable by modern standards: They set rules to limit the power of their technologies. In the Hebrew Bible, God commands the Israelites to build an altar for worship but forbids them from using stonecutting tools in its construction. Classical Greek philosophers warned that new inventions would bear costs equal to their power. Socrates tells the story of an ancient king who laments that the advent of writing will make men lose their faculty of memory and become ignorant. Plato looked down on the "base mechanic arts" of technology for weakening the body and enfeebling the soul.
In the wake of the usual income tax preparation madness, I sat down to update my Master List.
Prompted by Nicholas Bate's blog post, I quickly discovered that there had been some detours into separate lists.
I expected a one-page Master List but wound up with three-pages.
The largest portion, of course, is the Important but Not Urgent category from the Eisenhower Quadrants.
The white men in jackets and ties were obviously out of their element. Normally, at this time of day, they would be preparing to leave home or office for a couple of drinks, lunch and maybe a card game at their clubs. Now, on December 19, 1991, they shifted in their seats, returning hostile glares from black men and women in the packed basement of New Orleans City Hall. The city council was meeting in spartan surroundings while its regular chambers were being renovated, but the physical discomforts were nothing compared to the general psychic unease as everyone waited for the great debate on an ordinance to desegregate Mardi Gras parades and gentlemen's clubs.
From Lords of Misrule: Mardis Gras and the Politics of Race in New Orleans by James Gill
[This was recommended to me by an old friend who, when Mardi Gras rolls around, can always be found throwing beads from a float. I may join him some year.]
Nicholas Bate, whose productivity shows that he a Master of Lists, tells us why keeping one makes a huge difference.
[I use Dingbat journals for most of my lists simply because they possess a certain beauty.]
I wasn't trying to play the victim until the world taught me what a powerful grift it is. Believe it or not, all I wanted was to be successful. To hustle like my Pops but to keep my life and freedom in the process. My desperate chase for your approval was really all about that. I needed that approval in order to be considered successful. I needed it to feel like my life mattered.
- From Victim: A Novel by Andrew Boryga
Have recently been reading Glory Road before bedtime. Bruce Catton was far more than a great historian. There is a poetry in his prose.