excerpts from the apo-epis

2006-11-24 Thread rzep
the classical strains of the pipe, and chloe sitting under the farmer apple tree. she stirs, glances up. non-manifestet teoreme: as object you have the history epic (the sundiataratha), as percole the videorama of hope-deaths: movie wrist-slitters or hangman pascal loops: the idealist multideat

Re: On the disaster of the future planet now

2006-11-24 Thread Alan Sondheim
Well this really isn't similar to the Black Death, etc. The carrying- capacity of the planet will be reached around 2050. Global warming is already creating desertification at a furious rate etc. And it's not only over-population; it's also the gluttony of energy absorption that's occurring wor

Re: On the disaster of the future planet now

2006-11-24 Thread mez breeze
On 11/25/06, Eric Yost <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Finally, the disaster of the future planet is solely driven by the one factor people refuse to discuss: population. Human overpopulation drives pollution, resource depletion, damage to the biosphere, wars, famines, crowding of the poor in hypercit

Re: On the disaster of the future planet now

2006-11-24 Thread Eric Yost
>>On the disaster of the future planet now ... You could be right. The sky COULD be falling. Of course the sky has fallen before. In the mid-14th century, the Black Death killed a quarter of the population in Europe. The Mongol Invasion was not a good time for thoughtful people either. Plus

()

2006-11-24 Thread Alan Sondheim
() double up the images 2() invert the images -() combine the images ((),()) subtract the images ()-() transform the images ()(1)->()(0) http://www.asondheim.org/stone.mp4 publish the images (()) distribute the images (()) view with satisfaction the images (()) comprehend and absorb

Functional analysis of language

2006-11-24 Thread Peter Ciccariello
Functional analysis of language -- Peter Ciccariello http://invisiblenotes.blogspot.com/

Re: On the disaster of the future planet now

2006-11-24 Thread P!^VP 0!Z!^VP
http://ana-uploads.blogspot.com/2006/11/toga-woof-good-forever-1214 -112406.html P!^VP

On the disaster of the future planet now

2006-11-24 Thread Alan Sondheim
On the disaster of the future planet now ..."If one person, sane to a degree, may be found willing and ready to sacrifice his life and the life of others, for his beliefs in the now and hereafter, the world is doomed." ..."And yet it is a commonplace among us that the swarm of men and women sha

Foreword protake

2006-11-24 Thread P!^VP 0!Z!^VP
I find only ONE literary use of the word protake when I google it with "definition of"... though there are 250 commercial references un-defined (company names etc). I think I just defined a word in Ana's Autobiography fits somehow. Oh, the other single reference I googled???.I don

Foreword protake

2006-11-24 Thread P!^VP 0!Z!^VP
http://anaautobioyinphy.blogspot.com/ D^

....

2006-11-24 Thread Jukka-Pekka Kervinen
bidity porph rosia birthr egrination r phine relati tinnabulatio fold receiva d subhuman

Re: 317/365, Oladale

2006-11-24 Thread Jim Piat
I guess that when it comes to play the only losers are those who quit playing. I get a big kick out your vignettes, Dan. Jim Piat Good one there, Dan. But I like that Ola guy: he never got tired of losing. Obodo. Dan Waber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Oladale went by simply Ola an

Re: 317/365, Oladale

2006-11-24 Thread Obododimma Oha
Good one there, Dan. But I like that Ola guy: he never got tired of losing. Obodo. Dan Waber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Oladale went by simply Ola and ended up being the last person at college who'd play raquetball with me. He never got tired of losing, and wouldn't let me play left-handed

317/365, Oladale

2006-11-24 Thread Dan Waber
Oladale went by simply Ola and ended up being the last person at college who'd play raquetball with me. He never got tired of losing, and wouldn't let me play left-handed. His entire strategy was hit the ball HARDER. 40 words, 40 years 365 days, 365 people http://www.logolalia.com/40x365

Dedication...

2006-11-24 Thread P!^VP 0!Z!^VP
http://anaautobioyinphy.blogspot.com/2006/11/dedication-147-12605-1032- bytes.html P!^VP

Re: yes, yes, i can see the future, you can't

2006-11-24 Thread steve d. dalachinsky
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 10:48:51 -0500 Alan Sondheim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > es, es, icon seeds the torture, young scantily clad > tits here sin there cover tuned gaurd end, tin from lesson vies, twister > turn, for tan, lonley state ticks son then ratio, speeders' neat > spanking, ire tons spite

Re: 316/365, Henry

2006-11-24 Thread steve d. dalachinsky
you said it! On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 07:55:40 -0500 Dan Waber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Henry says it isn't that hard to make art. What's difficult is being > an artist continuously, every day, week after week, year after > year, > re-making your life into an ongoing artistic process from which a

2 from leftwich & dalachinsky

2006-11-24 Thread steve d. dalachinsky
dust band when gliveth in the gland of dust silence blinks the hand while every detail thick with rust gets drunk on both/and sand then tuning in & tuning out eclipsed both hope & mind for forked forms seem a natural means either more nor moral find then outside blinks the blather stick & insid