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Morgan’s Meme

Morgan’s Meme

Loz from Sunrays and Saturdays has tagged me for another meme. This is called “Morgan’s Meme” (who knows?)

So the instructions are:

1. Remove the link of the top blog and add your blog at the bottom.

2. Replace the last person’s answers to the questions with 5 of your own.

3. Pass this meme on to five fellow bloggers

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What were you doing ten years ago? (Five things)

  • 1. Defending my dissertation proposal, avoiding writing
  • 2. Planning the wedding
  • 3. Reading a lot of Jean Baudrillard
  • 4. Spending a lot of time with my future husband
  • 5. Redefining personal boundaries

What were you doing one year ago? (Five things)

  • 1. Looking for an academic job
  • 2. Having heart palpitations over my student loans
  • 3. Blogging a lot
  • 4. Having a lot more political concerns than I had ten years ago
  • 5. Spending a lot of time with my son

Five snacks you enjoy.

  • 1. Chocolate malted Ovaltine and cookies
  • 2. Grilled cheese and pineapple sandwiches
  • 3. Triscuits with smoked gouda
  • 4. Raspberries with chocolate
  • 5. Fresh bread with crab and spinach dip

Five Songs you know the lyrics to…

  • 1. All for the Best – Godspell
  • 2. God – Tori Amos
  • 3. Free Man in Paris – Joni Mitchell
  • 4. Bohemian Rhapsody – Queen (yup, in the car too)
  • 5. Galileo – Indigo Girls

Five things you would do if you were a millionaire.

  • 1. Pay off my student loans
  • 2. Complete Makeover
  • 3. Load up the college fund for Ben
  • 4. Seriously consider the filmed FU tour
  • 5. Be good and decide to bank, invest – a million ain’t that much anymore.

Five Bad Habits.

  • 1. Smoking
  • 2. Impatience
  • 3. Irritability
  • 4. Giggling
  • 5. Holding myself up to impossible standards

Five things you like to do.

  • 1. Read
  • 2. Sing
  • 3. Make love
  • 4. Discuss life and problems and issues
  • 5. Get centered and balanced

Five things you would never wear again.

  • 1. Tutu
  • 2. Leg warmers
  • 3. High heels
  • 4. Mumu
  • 5. Egyptian ceremonial robe

Five favorite toys.

  • 1. The big spinning top with the plunger whachamacallit on top
  • 2. Spirograph
  • 3. Puppets
  • 4. Building discs of clear colored plastic (good for castles)
  • 5. Microscope

Five things you hate to do.

  • 1. Clean floors
  • 2. Acknowledge that I am completely mistaken
  • 3. Realize that I’ve done something of which to be ashamed
  • 4. Say no to my son when he’s looking at me with those sad eyes
  • 5. Feel rejected

Ok, here’s who I’m tagging. This is just a start. Participate if you’d like to, and if I don’t name you, that doesn’t mean you can’t play. I’m trying to avoid always tagging the same blogs.

If you don’t blog but you want to participate, you can post your answers in the comments.

Saturday Laurie Anderson Video

Saturday Laurie Anderson Video

I think I’m out of Laurie Anderson’s PSAs, so I’m moving on to other Anderson videos for the Saturday post.

This one is “Mach 20,” about proportional speed and information-carrying vehicles…

[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=SirOxIeuNDE[/youtube]

Would they know that they had been sent for a purpose?

VirusHead Thoughtful Blogger Award

VirusHead Thoughtful Blogger Award

I’ve been awarded the “Thoughtful Blogger Award” by Jolly Roger at Reconstitution 2.0. JR said the most lovely thing:

Virus Head is one of the most gracious people I’ve encountered in my years of blogging. She has a gentle patience that almost makes me feel bad for the chainsaw approach I take to some of my more notable commenters. I DON’T feel bad, of course, but seeing her way stops me dead in my tracks from time to time.

VirusHead Thoughtful Blogger Award

For those who answer blog comments, emails, and make their visitors feel at home on their blogs. For the people who take others feelings into consideration before speaking out and who are kind and courteous. Also for all of those bloggers who spend so much of their time helping others bloggers design, improve, and fix their sites. This award is for those generous bloggers who think of others.

This means a lot to me, all the more so because at times I really have to struggle to maintain civility. It is very comforting for me to know that some readers notice (and care) that I try to be as gracious and understanding as I can (even when provoked). I don’t always succeed. It is very tempting for me to give in to my flair for a kind of wicked wit; it’s fun! I enjoy argument more than dialogue, and I really, really enjoy winning an argument. It’s true. What can I say?

When the urge comes, I try to remember that I can’t see the person, so I miss all sorts of nonverbal cues in the communication. I can’t adjust my rhetoric or style when I am missing vital information. I can’t add a smile or convey a sense of irony. Words on the page come across differently. You can’t broadcast the tone of voice, the facial expression.

People are also at all sorts of levels in different areas. They are from all sorts of backgrounds, and a wide range of personal, community, and cultural experience. You have to take people where they are to get anywhere… if it’s worth bothering at all. Online, it is sometimes difficult to get much of a sense of where someone might really be “coming from.”

It’s the teacher in me that usually wins the battle over my inner debater and warrior. Sometimes it’s a strain. I can get a little derisive from time to time. But I think less of myself when I do.

So – thanks, Jolly Roger. The admiration of a pirate is a wondrous thing.

Yes, this is another of those “Create-a-network” meme awards. You can link this back to me if you wish, you may choose to name others, or not. It’s up to you.

Can I toss it back in your general direction, JR? I am so glad to have met you online.

Todd at Postcards from Hell’s Kitchen is my earliest blogger contact on the net. He gets out there and explores everything there is. He is kind and caring and witty and very gracious.

Maria has a MySpace blog. She is a doll (I mean that in the good way). I first encountered her through the site Women Evolving. I can’t find it on the net anymore, but I used to visit the site years ago to be refreshed. She’s so very sweet and kind it almost kills me sometimes. We are contemporaries from Massachusetts, but we’ve never met.

Actually, I’ve never met anyone on this list. If I were to list people I knew, the list would be unmanageable.

Vance’s Meditations on an Eyeball illustrate the value of quality over quantity. He wrestles with difficult religious and philosophical questions. His posts are somehow both opinionated and open. In correspondence, he is a thoughtful and gracious writer. I’m putting him on the list because I hope that he will get more comments on his blog and have more of a chance to let his inner hospitality shine.

Don at Life Cycle Analysis posts on environmental change, archaeology, and human interactions with the environment. He always gets a fair number of comments. Here’s a “moonbat” who rises above it all (note the url of the blog – I know that “moonbat” is meant to be an insulting word to signify a crazy liberal, but I love the sound of the word). His blog has some interesting things you won’t see elsewhere.

Some of the most thoughtful kind people I’ve encountered online don’t blog at all, or not much.

For example, Elainna is a long-time online friend and Care2 buddy (her site is The Wild Side). She is a tireless worker for spirituality, the environment, progressive politics, and a host of other causes. I get a whole bunch of leads from her on petitions to sign, letters to write, news to read, things to do. She is always gracious and caring, and I am rather fond of her.

Dennis doesn’t post very often at his blog, but he does post at his Care2 group Love, Tolerance, and Ridiculous Stuff. Do you really want to see the thoughtful and hospitable response? He’s got it down to a science. I think he even means it.

Interesting Wikipedia Edits – Anonymous No More

Interesting Wikipedia Edits – Anonymous No More

Leave to someone working in theoretical neurobiology and artificial life at the Santa Fe Institute to have a most interesting side project. The Santa Fe Institute and the people there just simply… rock.

Virgil Griffith has created a Wikipedia propaganda-tracking tool – the WikiScanner (tip o the hat to Alternet for the story).

People change Wikipedia entries all the time. While the identities of individual editors are sometimes opaque, the networks and IP addresses are not. This tool shows where certain kinds of edits come from (see the FAQ). He has matched up organizational IPs to edits made.

Changes made by people with close ties to an issue are not supposed to be allowed to contribute to entries on it. Tools like this will make attempts more transparent (and documented, and correctable).

When the change is made by someone with access to the organization’s network, you have to shake your head at the level or incompetence.

I mean, if you or I were doing information sabotage and cleansing work, I would hope that we would have the basic sense to go off-site, or at least off-network!

Generally speaking, this is the kind of information vandalism that Griffith has found:

1. Wholesale removal of entire paragraphs of critical information. (common for both political figures and corporations)

2. White-washing — replacing negative/neutral adjectives with positive adjectives that mean something similar. (common for political figures)

3. Adding negative information to a competitor’s page. (common for corporations)

The Department of Defense has been busy on really quite a lot of topics – I am really kind of shocked at the kinds of things that interest them these days!

From Griffith’s list, you can follow all the edits by organizational name and IP addresses. Griffith directs the reader to a juicy list of edits posted at the Wired site, and encourages everyone to submit “salacious edits.” Here’s a couple:

The School of the Americas (now called WHISC) at Fort Benning has a long history of training Latin American officers, who are later found to be commanding death squads, involved in killing Catholic nuns and archbishops in Latin America and so forth. This is an edit whitewashing the mention of human rights abuses at WHISC – the IP address coming from Fort Benning (doim1-358.benning.army.mil)

Someone at the Republican Party HQ changed the entry on the history of Iraq’s Baath Party from “US-led occupying forces” to “US-led liberating forces.”

Diebold removing all criticism and contreversy (sic) about them. Many edits : http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=28623375
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=28623410
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=28623443
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=28623637

Nobojo has collected some interesting Bob Jones University edits that seem to indicate a high degree of manipulation of the “Bob Jones University” Wikipedia article.

Have fun. If you discover anything, pass it on! Be sure to list the IP, the organization, and the nature of the change. If you found it at Virgil’s site, give him credit, too!

Which Greek Goddess are You?

Which Greek Goddess are You?

What Greek Goddess are you?
You are Athena!
You are Athena!
Born from the head of Zeus himself, this goddess is the most respected and capable of all the goddesses. Like this goddess of defensive warfare, crafts and wisdom, you are courageous as a warrior, cunning as a fox, and wise beyond your years. You do not try to be a leader, but you are one merely because you have the raw material that renders admiration and followers. Though you may not know it… you have the world at your feet. But since you are wise, you will not allow this newfound knowledge to go to your head.
How do you compare?
Take this test! | Tests from Testriffic