[p2p-research] Doors of Perception: March 2010 - Who will control global urine flows?

Michel Bauwens michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Thu Jun 24 01:32:53 CEST 2010


yes absolutely, I would love such a piece,

thanks for eventually having a look, and perhaps referring to:
http://p2pfoundation.net/Qualitative_Growth, which makes a lot of valuable
points ..

Michel

On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 9:50 PM, Paul B. Hartzog <paulbhartzog at gmail.com>wrote:

> Michel
> I've spent most of my career arguing the when's and why's of growth
> vs. steady-state economies (Herman Daly, et al).
> It has become so second-nature to me that it's so much tacit knowledge
> I often forget to even say anything about it.
>
> Not everyone yet realizes that we are in a phase where we need
> steady-state economics.
>
> Would you like me to write something up like my bow-tie intro, a
> growth vs. steady-state economics intro?
>
> thx
> -p
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 2:07 AM, Michel Bauwens <michelsub2004 at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Dearall,
> >
> > see the first items on food policy below,
> >
> > also,
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sqwd_u6HkMo&feature=player_embedded#
> >
> > Sam, Paul: "somebody" who read one of your joint essays said, "it seems
> that
> > they are not critical about growth" ...
> >
> > this strikes me as most likely incorrect, or perhaps you just didn't
> discuss
> > that particular issue in what they read ... (sorry, this was in a
> > confidential email, can't say who or what they read ...)
> >
> > but it would be interesting to have your views on that,
> >
> > Michel
> >
> > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > From: Doors Report <doors-report at list.doorsofperception.com>
> > Date: Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 10:15 AM
> > Subject: Doors of Perception: March 2010 - Who will control global urine
> > flows?
> > To: doors-report at list.doorsofperception.com
> >
> >
> > Doors of Perception Report
> > by John Thackara
> > Who will control global urine flows?
> > March 2010
> >
> >
> > This free monthly newsletter starts conversations on issues to do
> > with design for resilience, and announces Doors of Perception events.
> > Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/
> > Back issues: http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives.php
> >
> >
> > **** **** **** **** ****
> > THIS MONTH’S HIGHLIGHTS
> > Food and finance- - - Food and "poor washing" - - - Who will control
> global
> > urine flows? - - - Energy follows its bliss - - - Defence spending and
> > culture
> > spending - - - Our doomsday machine economy - - - How to tell a design
> story
> > - - - The art of mediated presence - - - Book events in The Netherlands -
> -
> > -
> > Simultaneity in Vienna - - - Connected community design in Glasgow - - -
> > Microbanker on a bike - - - Green map iphone app - - - Fashion Futures -
> - -
> > Sex
> > and Drugs book offer - - - Ludicrous architecture - - - Film about game
> > design -
> > - - technology for development - - - Doors of Perception Portfolio
> >
> > **** **** **** **** ****
> >
> > ] FIVE COMPLICATED ISSUES AND A SIMPLE VIDEO
> >
> > FOOD AND FINANCE (COMPLEX ISSUE 1)
> > Which country do you suppose receives the largest amount of food aid
> right
> > now? Haiti, after its terrible earthquake? Somalia perhaps, or Zimbabwe,
> in
> > sub-Saharan Africa? The answer is: the United States. The cost of its
> food
> > stamps programme will top $60 billion during 2010. The number of US
> citizens
> > receiving food stamps has reached 35 million and the program is growing
> at
> > 20,000 people a day. The cost of feeding poor US citizens is five times
> the
> > $12 billion it would cost to address malnutrition for 90 percent of the
> > world's most malnourished children - except that this smaller number is
> not
> > being spent. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reports that less than two
> > percent
> > of development and emergency aid actually addresses malnutrition. What is
> > one
> > to make of, or do about, these grim and perplexing numbers? A first step
> > would
> > be the read the latest issue of the Food Ethics Council journal; it's all
> > about food and finance.
> > http://tiny.cc/YiAH3
> > http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/us/03foodstamps.html?hp
> > http://tiny.cc/br35e
> >
> http://www.doctorswithoutbordersdonations.org/publications/reports/2009/MSF-Malnutrition-How-Much-is-Being-Spent.pdf
> > http://tiny.cc/O2T2g
> > http://www.foodethicscouncil.org/system/files/fec%205-1%201-3_0.pdf
> >
> > FOOD AND "POOR WASHING" (COMPLEX ISSUE 2)
> > Proponents of genetically engineered crops insist that they will increase
> > yields
> > to end hunger, reduce costs, and improve the livelihoods of farmers and
> poor
> > people. It's less frequently mentioned that these crops will be grown
> from
> > seeds
> > owned and controlled by private companies. Hence the term "poor washing",
> in
> > which the interests of poor people are cited in support for a new green
> > revolution, especially in Africa. The Alliance for a Green Revolution in
> > Africa
> > (AGRA), for example, states that its aims are "to achieve a food secure
> and
> > prosperous Africa through the promotion of rapid, sustainable
> agricultural
> > growth based on smallholder farmers". It all sounds well-meaning and
> > innocuous,
> > but critics charge that AGRA and the Gates Foundation (AGRA is the Gates
> > Foundation biggest grantee, with over $262 million committed) are
> glossing
> > over
> > the forced displacement of populations, and privatisation of food, that
> this
> > new
> > green revolution entails. "AGRA and its biggest benefactor speak about
> 'land
> > mobility' - but this means moving farmers off their farms so the land can
> be
> > used for large scale mechanized agriculture...there is no mention of
> where
> > these
> > people will go and live, and how they will be reemployed". Read more
> here:
> > The Future Control of Food edited by Geoff Tansey and Tasmin Rajotte.
> > http://www.earthscan.co.uk/?tabid=310
> > Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa:
> > http://www.agra-alliance.org/
> > Voices from Africa: African farmers and environmentalists speak out
>  against
> > a
> > new green revolution in Africa, edited by Anuradha Mittal with Melissa
> Moore
> > http://tiny.cc/OEabi
> >
> http://www.oaklandinstitute.org/voicesfromafrica/pdfs/voicesfromafrica_full.pdf
> > Greenwashing and poor washing:
> > http://tiny.cc/RAYTR
> >
> http://crossedcrocodiles.wordpress.com/2009/04/06/agra-monsanto-gates-green-washing-poor-washing/
> > Africa’s Land and Family Farms – Up for Grabs? by Joan Baxter
> > http://tiny.cc/Tx6Sf
> >
> http://www.americanpendulum.com/2010/02/africas-land-and-farms-up-for-grabs/
> >
> > WHO WILL CONTROL WORLD URINE FLOWS?  (COMPLEX ISSUE 3)
> > The complexity, interdependence, and monopoly control of food systems is
> one
> > reason they are not resilient: disruption to one element disrupts the
> whole.
> > The
> > same goes for sewage systems. The sanitary revolution tranformed public
> > health,
> > but there are increasing doubts about the long term sustainability of
> > large-scale, centralised, water-based sanitation. The highly inflexible
> > nature
> > of existing sanitation systems, burdened with over a century of capital
> > infrastructure investment, and assets that require 30-50 years to pay
> back,
> > make
> > centralised sanitation both economically unsustainable and
> institutionally
> > rigid. Large-scale sewage systems also waste a valuable resource:
> > phosphorous.
> > Phosphorus is an important element for many essential processes in the
> body.
> > In
> > combination with calcium it's necessary for the formation of bones and
> > teeth.
> > But mining phosphorus for food fertilizer is consuming the mineral faster
> > than
> > geologic cycles can replenish it. Urine is a potential source of the
> > mineral. So
> > far, there is no indication that Bill Gates wants to monopolise world
> > supplies
> > of urine: this may be because it's complicated to do so. To capture,
> value,
> > and
> > reuse urine requires a multi-dimensional transformation in how we think
> > about
> > and treat sewage. Technologies, regulations, business models - and
> > especially
> > attitudes and behaviour - all have to change. Dena Fam, a design
> researcher
> > at
> > the Institute for Sustainable Futures in Sydney, is involved in some
> > facinating
> > projects to 'close the phosphorus' loop locally. "Sewage is a resource,
> not
> > a
> > waste product", Fam explains, "yet conventional sanitation systems
> struggle
> > to
> > capture, recycle and reuse sewage constituents in sustainable ways". Fam
> and
> > her
> > colleagues will pilot urine diversion, recovery and reuse at UTS with the
> > aim of
> > illuminating the interdependent factors that determine successful uptake
> and
> > potential scale-up of radical sustainable urban sanitation. Read more at:
> > 'The challenge of system change - analysis of Sydney's sewer system'
> > in Design Philosophy Papers 3/2009
> > http://tiny.cc/1aYMx
> >
> http://www.isf.uts.edu.au/publications/fametal2009challengesystemchange.pdf
> >
> > ENERGY FOLLOWS ITS BLISS (COMPLEX ISSUE NUMBER 4)
> > "Industrial civilization is a complicated thing" understates John Michael
> > Greer
> > in his blog this week,"and its decline and fall bids fair to be more
> > complicated
> > still. But both rest on the refreshingly simple foundations of physical
> > law".
> > Greer uses the behaviour of a cup of coffee to explain why projects to
> > replace
> > for fossil fuels using sunlight, or any other readily available renewable
> > energy
> > source, or nuclear, are doomed to fail. "People don't realize", adds
> Greer,
> > "that when a plane full of tourists flies from LA to Cairo so they can
> visit
> > the
> > Great Pyramid, that one flight uses as much energy as it took to build
> the
> > Great
> > Pyramid". He's right, I didn't realize that. There's so much to realize
> > these days.
> > http://tiny.cc/VN1W9
> >
> http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2010/02/energy-follows-its-bliss.html
> >
> > DEFENCE SPENDING VS CULTURE SPENDING  (COMPLEX ISSUE NUMBER 5)
> > A few weeks back I was talking to Kjetil Trædal Thorsen, a partner in the
> > Norwegian architectural firm Snøhetta, when we were drowned out by the
> roar
> > of a
> > Eurofighter passing overhead. "One of those costs the same as a
> medium-sized
> > opera house", Kjetl observed drily. Kjetl's throwaway comment prompted me
> to
> > start looking for numbers comparing military versus cultural spending on
> a
> > country-by-country basis. In round numbers, Germany appears to spend
> 25,000
> > euros per person on defence, versus about 100 euros per head on culture.
> I
> > have
> > to assume that the gap in the US and UK, were the numbers to be
> available,
> > would
> > be a good deal wider. Time to despair? Not necessarily. Read more at:
> > http://tiny.cc/O15cN
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2010/03/culture_cuts.php
> >
> > WHY OUR GDP-CHASING ECONOMY IS A DOOMSDAY MACHINE (THIS ONE IS EASY)
> > This one's easy: watch this New Economics Foundation video.
> > http://tiny.cc/MSywB
> >
> > ]      DOORS OF PERCEPTION STUFF
> >
> > HOW TO TELL A DESIGN STORY
> > I spent a terrific day in Falmouth, England last week with 60
> > about-to-graduate
> > design students. They are preparing to present their work at an important
> > exhibition, and I was one of the guests invited to act as a friendly
> critic
> > of
> > their plans. I pleaded: don't plaster your exhibiton space with 60
> > portfolios,
> > because visitors, dazed by hundreds of portfolios elsewhere in the show,
> > will
> > blank out. Over the years I have often seen years of work by design
> > researchers
> > wasted, or at least ignored, because they did not communicate well. If
> > you're
> > about to graduate, here are a couple of stories about such
> near-disasters,
> > followed by 15 tips for design research presentations.
> > http://tiny.cc/ay7W5
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2002/11/does_your_desig.php
> >
> > THE ART OF MEDIATED PRESENCE
> > ICT developers have been working on videocommunication since 1946 - but
> the
> > experience still sucks. If massive amounts of bandwidth are not the
> answer,
> > are
> > there more artful ways to enhance remote communication? Preparations for
> the
> > ElectroSmog International Festival for Sustainable Immobility in
> Amsterdam
> > (and
> > the internet) are gathering pace. Doors of Perception has agreed to
> co-host
> > a
> > session on Friday 19 at deBalie, in the afternoon (13h-15h). Our focus
> will
> > be
> > on practical design and artistic steps that could be taken right now. Our
> > panel
> > will includes Martin Butler, a dancer and choreographer; an Alternate
> > Reality
> > Game designer; and Caroline Nevejan. a founder alumnus of Doors who
> recently
> > completed a PhD on expert on witnessed presence. (See following story).
> > http://www.electrosmogfestival.net/news/
> >
> > DID YOU SEE ME?
> > The performing arts conjour up the presence of someone who is not there
> > using
> > words, lighting, orchestration, and choreography. They've done so for
> > centuries.
> > Technology-mediated presence confronts similar design challanges to the
> > performing arts: how to set a context, how to induce attribution, how to
> > show
> > the unsaid, and more. Caroline Nevejan is guest editing a special issue
> of
> > the
> > journal AI and Society on the theme Witnessed Presence, and invites
> papers
> > from
> > engineering, social science, philosophy, architecture, psychology, art &
> > design,
> > performance arts, IT.
> > http://tiny.cc/njjsT
> > http://www.xs4all.nl/~nevejan/index.php5
> > http://www.being-here.net/
> >
> > ME, AND MY EVER-EVOLVING BOOK, IN NEDERLAND
> > Rule one in book publishing (where I worked for ten years) is: promote
> your
> > own
> > book, because nobody else will do so with as much commitment. In that
> > spirit,
> > please note that my new book, Plan B, is now out in Dutch. I use the word
> > "new"
> > here in a contemporary, post-linear sense. Although Plan B is based on In
> > the
> > Bubble: Designing In A Complex World, which was published by MIT Press,
> this
> > latest version is much changed: I reduced the original English text by
> half,
> > to
> > 45,000 words, and then added five new chapters on: Sustainability;
> Metrics;
> > Food; Development; and Telepresence. This prompted my publisher, SUN, to
> go
> > with
> > the title of the Brazilian edition, Plan B. I'll talk about its content
> > (and hopefully debate with you) at the following three events:
> > Wednesday 17 March: 17h (time to be confirmed) Lecture/debate with Marcus
> > Fairs, Design Academy Eindhoven;
> > Thursday 18 March: Book presentation at Nederlaands Architectuurinstituut
> > (NAi) early evening;
> > Friday 19 March: Electrosmog at deBalie 13h; Plan B presentation at de
> Balie
> > 16h.
> > http://tiny.cc/e0aWC
> >
> http://www.sunarchitecture.nl/publicity/news.html#4b8d06ea28d495.26988266
> > or just buy the book at:
> > http://tiny.cc/XnxqI
> >
> http://www.sunarchitecture.nl/catalogue/categori/sun-statements/plan_b_9789085067870.html
> >
> >
> > ]   OTHER NEWS AND EVENTS
> >
> > SIMULTANEITY IN VIENNA (CONFERENCE 19 MARCH)
> > "Gone is the time where can just focus on technology, or political
> change,
> > or
> > personal change. The challenge of the times require tackling all aspects
> of
> > change simultaneously". Thailand-based Michel Bauwens, founder of the
> Peer
> > to
> > Peer Foundation, always has something wise and interesting to say. His
> > keynote
> > talk at the Lift conference in Vienna on 19 March is about "an
> integrative
> > approach to enabling open infrastructures (and) value-driven social
> > practices... we need to change ourselves, as well as our ability to
> > cooperate
> > in groups".
> > http://tiny.cc/n0ZaZ
> >
> http://liftconference.com/lift-at-home/events/2010/03/lift-austria/program
> >
> > GREEN GORILAZ (CONNECTED COMMUNITY DESIGN)
> > Congratulations to Ian Grout, their professor, and a team of students
> from
> > the
> > Glasgow School of Art : they are this year's overall national winners for
> > ‘Sustain our Nation’ – a competition run by the Audi Design Foundation
> that
> > challenged young designers to create design-led social enterprises.
> > Glasgow's
> > winning project, Green Gorillaz, sets out to to create a connected
> community
> > within the Wyndford estate of North West Glasgow.
> > http://tiny.cc/TmDoD
> > http://getgoglasgow1.org/getgoglasgow/Welcome.html
> >
> > BANKERS ON BIKES (MICROFINANCE VIDEO)
> > Andrew Hinton has made a short film about a banker opening up access to
> > money to
> > rural communities. Two-thirds of India’s one-billion-plus population live
> in
> > the
> > nation’s 600,000 villages, and South Indian bank manager J S Parthiban
> set
> > out
> > to to improve their economic circumstances. He encouraged beggars to open
> > bank
> > accounts in New Delhi, and pioneered micro-loans to villagers in his home
> > state
> > of Tamil Nadu. "Microfinance is not without its detractors" says Hinton,
> > "but
> > Parthibhan is a man operating with a real sense of conviction and
> purpose".
> > Hinton's film was one of the winners of the BRITDOC/Co-operative
> Competition
> > "It's Good To Know"
> > http://www.vimeo.com/8758822
> >
> > THINK GLOBAL, MAP LOCAL (GREEN MAP IPHONE APP)
> > Green Map System proposes a new
> > way to answer the question: "What's Green Nearby?" A mobile version of
> Open
> > Green Map enables you to interact with the world from "a unique
> perspective
> > that
> > is ideal for any internet-enabled phone". What’s Green Nearby?™ provides
> an
> > array of green living resources, arranged with those nearest you first.
> > http://www.greenmap.org/
> >
> > FASHION FUTURES (RESEARCH PROGRAMME LAUNCHED)
> > The stated aim of Fashion Futures, a joint project between Forum for the
> > Future
> > and Levi Strauss & Co, is to "put the global fashion industry on the path
> to
> > a
> > sustainable future". Fashion Futures 2025 describes four scenarios of
> what
> > the
> > world could be like in 2025, and asks: How will the industry react to
> > shortages
> > of cotton and other raw materials? How could the fashion workforce be
> > affected
> > by shifting supply chains and technological development? How might
> > technology
> > influence fashion and change the way it is produced and sold? As the
> project
> > evolves, all materials will be available to download and use free of
> charge.
> > http://tiny.cc/2802v
> > http://www.forumforthefuture.org/projects/fashion-futures
> >
> > SEX AND DRUGS AND ROCK AND ROLL (NOW AVAILABLE)
> > Ted Polhemus is an insightful and entertaining ethnographer of popular
> > culture.
> > Ted's latest chronicle, "sex, drugs, rock ‘n’ roll, protest,
> architecture,
> > design, streetstyle 1947-2022" ranges from ‘Sweet Sixteen’ to Grey Power,
> > Playboy to Punk, the rise and fall of suburbia, and beyond. Ted wants to
> put
> > his
> > new text out there before it is incarnated in physical form, so If you
> want
> > a
> > free digital copy email ted.polhemus@ dsl.pipex.com. If you are a book
> > publisher, or exhibition or tv producer, and you don't know Ted's work,
> you
> > are
> > missing out:
> > http://tiny.cc/JJVnh
> > http://www.tedpolhemus.com/main_homepage461.html
> >
> > LUDICROUS ARCHITECTURE (LANGUAGE POLICE CAUTION NEW BOOK)
> > A new book poses an intriguing question: what connects the design of a
> board
> > game, an athletic competition in a stadium, a videogame, an Alternate
> > Reality
> > Game, a location-based mobile game, or any combination thereof? Sadly,
> the
> > author of Toward a Ludic Architecture dampens my interest by telling me
> that
> > his
> > main question is "How are play and games architected?" - because
> architected
> > is
> > not a word. I am further dispirited to read that the author is available
> for
> > "conceptual design consultancy". Insofar as "conceptual design" has any
> > meaning,
> > which is not very much, it means that the designer is divorced from the
> real
> > world. But Ian Borden, a heavyweight architecture professor, says the
> book
> > is
> > "indispensable reading for anyone interested in the joyful qualities of
> > cities
> > and architecture” - so you be the judge.
> > http://tiny.cc/YAom3
> > http://www.etc.cmu.edu/etcpress/content/toward-ludic-architecture
> >
> > PLAYMAKERS (FILAM ABOUT DESIGN AND GAME PLAY)
> > I often think that we should all just play more rather than write books
> or
> > make
> > films about the subject. But I'm on weak ground here: we once organised a
> > big
> > Doors of Perception conference on the subject. This must be why NESTA,
> > thinkpublic and Hide&Seek have invited me (and by extension, you) you to
> the
> > London Premiere of playmakers. This 35 minute documentary is the
> culmination
> > of
> > a six month project in which film maker Ivo Gormley followed the progress
> of
> > designers Alex Fleetwood and Holly Gramazio as they developed a new game.
> > Following the screening Gormely, Gramazio and Fleetwood will be in a
> > discussion
> > chaired by Margaret Robertson.
> > http://playmakerspremiere.eventbrite.com/
> > http://tiny.cc/jy6pm
> > http://museum.doorsofperception.com/doors5/doors5index.html
> >
> > GOOD INTENTIONS, AWFUL LANGUAGE (TECHNOLOGY FOR DEVELOPMENT)
> > The aim of Kopernik, a new non-profit venture, is to "provide
> life-changing
> > technology to the poor". I do not doubt that Kopernik is well-intentioned
> -
> > but
> > I'm afraid that anyone who talks about "the poor" risks losing my vote.
> As
> > with
> > "the elderly" or "the disabled", this use of language dehumanises the
> people
> > it
> > refers to. Whatever: Kopernik makes technology designed for the
> developing
> > world
> > accessible through the Internet by harnessing the power of individual
> > donations.
> > Products in the scheme include the life straw for water purification, the
> > solar
> > powered lamp, and self-adjusting eye glasses. “By providing individuals
> with
> > a
> > way to donate directly towards the purchase of the products, we're
> creating
> > a
> > more efficient supply chain from manufacturer to recipient without
> getting
> > bogged down in the inefficiencies of large agencies that have
> historically
> > acted as the go-between."
> > http://www.thekopernik.org/
> >
> > WHAT DO YOU GUYS DO? (DOORS OF PERCEPTION PORTFOLIO)
> > Bulb-planting has started early at Doors HQ: We've posted summary
> > descriptions
> > of the last ten years' Doors of Perception projects - the idea being that
> we
> > plan to do more projects like these ones, only better. All City Eco Lab
> > posts
> > are now in one stack; [City Eco Lab never had its own website]; so too
> are
> > all
> > posts on new economic metrics. We've started a new category on transition
> > and
> > resilience; here we reflect on our encounters with the Transition
> movement
> > and
> > the ways it is building resilience in communities around the world. Read
> > more
> > at:
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/doors_of_perception_portfolio/
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/city_eco_lab/
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/new_economic_metrics/
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/transition_and_resilience/
> >
> > "CONFIDENT, CONNECTED, OPEN TO CHANGE"
> > According to a new Pew Center study 'Millennials' - teens and
> > twenty-somethings
> > who are making the passage into adulthood - are "confident,
> self-expressive,
> > upbeat , and open to change." Isn't this marvelous news. If you know any
> > Millenials - perhaps one lives in your house? - please suggest that they
> > need to
> > subscribe to Doors of Perception Report.
> >
> http://pewsocialtrends.org/pubs/751/millennials-confident-connected-open-to-change
> > http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/
> >
> > -----------------
> >
> > This free monthly newsletter starts conversations on issues to do
> > with design for resilience, and announces Doors of Perception events.
> > Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/
> > Back issues: http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives.php
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > P2P Foundation: http://p2pfoundation.net  -
> http://blog.p2pfoundation.net
> >
> > Connect: http://p2pfoundation.ning.com; Discuss:
> > http://listcultures.org/mailman/listinfo/p2presearch_listcultures.org
> >
> > Updates: http://del.icio.us/mbauwens; http://friendfeed.com/mbauwens;
> > http://twitter.com/mbauwens; http://www.facebook.com/mbauwens
> >
> > Think tank: http://www.asianforesightinstitute.org/index.php/eng/The-AFI
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
> --
> --------------------------------------------------------
> The Forward Foundation
> http://www.ForwardFound.org <http://www.forwardfound.org/>
> paul.b.hartzog at forwardfound.org
> --------------------------------------------------------
> http://www.PaulBHartzog.org <http://www.paulbhartzog.org/>
> PaulBHartzog at PaulBHartzog.org
> --------------------------------------------------------
> http://www.panarchy.com
> PaulBHartzog at panarchy.com
> --------------------------------------------------------
> University of Michigan
> PHartzog at umich.edu
> --------------------------------------------------------
> The Universe is made up of stories, not atoms.
>                 --Muriel Rukeyser
>
> Perceive differently, then you will act differently.
>                 --Paul B. Hartzog
> --------------------------------------------------------
>



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