Thursday, June 16, 2011

The best bikes can run big errands

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I pulled this bike from a dumpster over two years ago. Very versatile and likely to outlive me. Everyone could and probably should do the same.

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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

You should read this, and every other Unconfirmed Reports post...

via Unconfirmed Reports by John Mansfield on 6/11/11

[all names changed but one]

I came back from a visit to Adelaide bearing gifts. David had requested a Carlton football guernsey, to which I said okay. After a pause he asked if I could bring him a coat too, I said maybe; then he asked if I could also get him some football boots, I said maybe again, and after another pause he asked if I could also get him a dick pump. I said really? He said yes, for fucking, and made a demonstrative gesture.

To show my goodwill, I met one of his requests, but no it wasn’t the pump.

Nathan had requested a washing machine, but that didn’t fit in my backpack; Mark had requested a “wooden flute”, so I got him a recorder, which I hope is what he meant.

My relationship to people has now become, effectively, monetized. David immediatley went around the camp showing off his new guernsey, so now I am inundated with requests for consumer goods, but it’s okay, I don’t mind saying no. In fact I am practicing the local custom of saying yes to everything, by which I usually mean no.

When I say that I am now more closely accepted by the Evil Warriors mob than before, you would be justified in taking this with a pinch of cynicism - “Yeah, I bet they accept you now that you’re handing stuff out.”

But there is a bit more to it than that. One of the main things that binds together close-knit groups like the EW is the movement of goods and resources around the community. People demand and supply things to confirm their connectedness; if anything, I am wondering if I should start playing the other side of the game too, by walking round the EW camp asking people for money. But I suspect that my requests for help with language are already seen as a form of begging.

After we finished playing football one evening this week, a couple of the EW guys - David and Craig - asked if they could come back to my house, “to rest a while”. I said okay, and when we got there I made them tea and got out some biscuits. I was aware that the whole thing was partially because they were trying to collect together $50 for a bag of ganja, and the visit to my house was an elaborate introduction to a money request… but like I said, I’m getting good at saying no, and I think there was also genuine curiosity to see where the whitefella lives.

Even my shipping container compares pretty well to the houses where the EW mob live, and they were clearly fascinated by the amount of stuff I have lying around. David toured the place, looking at things, and in many cases asking me if he could have them. I let him have a football and a carton of juice, but not my computer or my new boots I just bought in Adelaide.

I have a local map on the wall, covering about a 50km radius around the estuary in which Wadeye is located. David stood looking at this, and asked me to point out Adelaide for him. I tried to explain that Adelaide was far off the map.

We watched football for a while on the TV, and my visitors seemed to quite enjoy being there, perhaps glad to get away from the stresses of family. For some reason they were worried though about my neighbour coming home and seeing them - maybe they felt they weren’t supposed to be there? My nextdoor neighbour is another whitefella, who works on the council. His name is Dicko, and it’s hard to forget it, because his ute is always sitting there outside my door with the numberplate on it, DICKO.

After a while my visitors said they had to go out and “keep looking”. That means, they were still only up to $15, and had a lot of requesting still to go before they could get that grass. I believe that guys like them spend a large amount of their time on this activity; payday (doleday) is probably the only time they have $50 independently, so on all the other days they gather it together by touring their friends and relatives. $50 buys a pretty miserable quantity, just enough for a couple of joints, which David and Craig say they rely on get to sleep.

There doesn’t seem to be anything secretive about the marijuana business here. I soon learnt the local words for it, so I recognise when people shout trade information to each other, openly in the street. And I’ve been told more than once that _____ is a big dealer, so apparently that’s an open secret too. He even drives around flamboyantly in a moderately flashy truck. It makes the whole “community against ganja” thing, the big sign in your face as you land at the airstrip, saying “Ganja is not welcome here,” seem pointless and hypocritical. If I’ve found out this quick, I assume that every Aboriginal adult in town knows all about it.

Maybe they should just sell it at the shop, and at least let the proceeds go to community funds, rather than somebody’s flash truck. Or maybe not. I can’t pretend I know how to untie all the bizarre contradictions and hypocrisies of this town.

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Tornado hits Massachusetts

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And I heard about it on @twitter. Watched it on the smallest screen in the house.

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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Activists vs Commanders

commandernounfreq. = 209.00 / million
   
shareverbfreq. = 211.00 / millionsalience = 107612.00
activistnounfreq. = 208.00 / millionsalience = 103699.00PUBLISH >>
 
  • Syrian security forces shot dead 11 people and wounded more than 100 in and around Talbisa and Rastan on Sunday after tanks encircled the towns near the central city of Homs, an activist told Reuters. FOX NEWS TOP HEADLINES
  • Scientists and activists feared that focusing on coping would diminish efforts to reduce carbon emissions. DAILY BEAST BLOGS AND STORIES
  • Gomes, who attempted suicide while in North Korean custody, was thought to be a Christian activistCNN WORLD
  • In 1976, she went to Syracuse University, where she became something of an activist, one time leading a boycott of the college bookstore after students complained that the store was charging outrageously high prices. NEW YORK TIMES, NY REGION
  • Morocco: Club-wielding police riding motorcycles drove into crowds of thousands of demonstrators in the country 's largest city to disperse a protest by pro-democracy activistsSEATTLE TIMES FULL FEED
  • In Talbiseh, a village near Homs, security forces fired at a school bus driving on a main road, killing a driver and wounding several children, according to the Local Coordination Committees of Syria, an umbrella group of activists that helps organize and document protests. NEW YORK TIMES, MIDDLE EAST
  • She has a loyal following among conservatives and tea-partyactivists, but she remains a divisive figure among the wider public.AP POLITICS
  • Human rights activists, however, have long accused him of persecuting dissidents and political opponents. NEW YORK TIMES, WORLD
  • said Subodh Raj Pyakurel, a human rights activistNEW YORK TIMES, WORLD
  • She has a loyal following among conservatives and tea-partyactivists, but she remains a divisive figure among the wider public.AP POLITICS
  • But according to the accounts of family members interviewed by Arabic news channels and by human-rights activists, the boy had been among a group detained when his father took him to an anti-regime rally April 29 in their hometown of Jiza, a small southern farming community near the protest flash point of Daraa. SEATTLE TIMES FULL FEED
  • After Sarkozy 's " EG8 " conference last week -- an event that brought together government leaders and Internet execs to legitimize an effort to censor and surveil the net -- a group of civil society people and activists threw an impromptu press-conference to explain what Sarko and company missed by treating the net as simply an engine for big business. BOING BOING

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