inthenoosphere:

“We belong to the future. We must put ourselves into it, each one at his situation. We must not plant ourselves against the new and attempt to retain a beautiful world, one that must perish. Nor must we try to build, with creative fantasy, a new one that claims to be immune to the ravages of becoming. We have to formulate the recent. But that we can only do if we say yes to it; yet with incompatible heart we have to retain our awareness of all that is destructive and inhuman in it. Our time is given to us as a soil on which we stand, as a task that we have to master.”

— Romano Guardini

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romano_Guardini

I love that there is fog now, and that I can hear the foghorns somewhere impossibly far away in the sea that may or may not exist in that milky nothingness outside the windows, and that the usual expressway noise can do nothing about it.

6 Incredible Scammer and Grifter Stories

Particularly Anna Sorokina and Artur Samarin stories – both fascinating!
I actually kind of sympathize with them both – the system is no longer set up for equality of opportunity, and they managed to circumvent it – in some ways their only fault is not being born lucky.

Jill Stein though – I was actually one of her marks who gave her recount money in 2016. Never giving anything to the Green Party ever again – for me, they will forever be associated with cheats and hacks, with cynicism not quite the same level as Republicans but getting there.

6 Incredible Scammer and Grifter Stories

explore-blog:

“After you have exhausted what there is in business, politics, conviviality, love, and so on — have found that none of these finally satisfy, or permanently wear — what remains? Nature remains; to bring out from their torpid recesses, the affinities of a man or woman with the open air, the trees, fields, the changes of seasons — the sun by day and the stars of heaven by night.”

Walt Whitman, born on this day in 1819, on what makes life worth living

wetwareproblem:

socialjusticeichigo:

colacharm:

socialjusticeichigo:

queeranarchism:

colacharm:

adults, while forcing all children above the age of 5 to sit still, be silent, and obey orders for 7-8 hours a day with minimal breaks, reducing their exposure to fresh air and sunlight to almost nothing, forcing them to alter their natural sleeping patterns to increase productivity, and repeatedly telling them their self worth depends on their being able to follow these instructions perfectly for 13 or more years: kids these days are so lazy! they never go outside! they never want to do anything! clearly it’s not because of us!

It is honestly so heartbreaking to see how many conversations in the notes are comparing who gets 30 minutes for lunch

and an afternoon or two off or no homework until they’re 12 years old.. as if that in ANY way compares to being able to run out in the sun whenever you feel like it and sleep as much as you need in your own rhythm and be in control of what your day looks like and who you spend it with and not being subjected to an environment that is designed to train discipline.

Experiencing true autonomy and freedom isn’t being able to go to the bathroom without asking, or having wednesday afternoons off. Slightly ‘better’ school systems are still designed to acclimatise kids to the drudgery of wage labour.

What would be the solution to this? Because kids still have to learn obviously. Homeschooling?

A better public education system with a focus on actually learning instead of making good grades.

Sorry, I was talking about @queeranarchism‘s response, because it seems to say that wouldn’t be sufficient?

Well, no; what queeranarchism is saying is that the problem is the end goal. As long as we’refocused on drudge labour, you’re going to get an environment that’s shitty for actual child development. We need to make child development itself the primary goal, rather than training a useful worker.

TL;DR: The solution, as always, is “smash capitalism.”

I wish I knew the answer. There are co-op schools around where I live that address this issue really well. They are $45K/year or so.

Schools in countries that have smashed capitalism do not address this problem – just ask anyone who went to school in an ex-Soviet country (or China, Cuba, Venezuela etc), its this plus uniforms, military training from young age, rote memorization and strict gender separation (shop classes for boys, housekeeping for girls).

The only places where this may have been addressed and worked well at scale were agrarian collectivist communities made up of refugees from Eastern Europe, North Africa and Yemen that existed in a certain small Middleeastern country no longer fashionable with social-justice set, but I don’t think I’d want to move there now for my child.

Maybe Nordic countries – but their immigration restrictions are tight and they wouldn’t want outsiders like us.