Haley Barbour: Koran Burning
Keep your goals to yourself
Christine O'Donnell's Views On Sex And Porn Take Social Conservatism To The Extreme
Sid Meier's Civilisation V
Alwar Balasubramaniam: Art of Substance and Absence
Vanessa de Mata/Ben Harper: Boa Sorte/Good Luck
Dropping Knowledge
Question yourself and the world around you.

Dropping Knowledge invites you to question yourself and the world around you. Every time you ask yourself a question, a new dialogue begins…

Dropping Knowledge empowers you to seek answers to questions in dialogue with others. When you ask in order to understand, when you respond in order to share, this is dropping knowledge…

Dropping Knowledge arose from an understanding of how provocative, challenging and entertaining questions, communicated by innovative multimedia, can inspire new thinking.

Click on the view button below to join in the journey.

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CORRUPT: mocking the failures of modern liberal society
16 sep  |  CORRUPT: mocking the failures of modern liberal society  . . read more
Disassociated.com
1 jul  |  Dissecting the {Subset} Culture . . read more
RIP! A Remix Manifesto
1 jul  |  Filmmaker Brett Gaylor explores issues of copyright in the information age, mashing up the media landscape of the 20th century and shattering the wall between users and producers.

 . . read more
The Cognitive Dissonance of Being American - by Leslie Powell
14 oct  |  Every once in a while, I try experimenting with having a political opinion completely 180 degrees from my own. Pro-life, Republican, heteronormative, Dominionist Christian, what have you. It improves me as a writer, possibly also as a person. And it gives me the bends similar to LSD.

I don't keep the opinion, mind you. I just exercise what it would be like to believe that Sarah Palin was actually qualified to be Vice President, that the Republican party gives a shit about poor working class people, that Obama was a secret Muslim, that somehow being a Muslim disqualifies you from being a human, or even a President, that white American people are superior to everyone else on the planet, and that those fucking Mexicans want my job.

And then I realize that it's time wasted; that there are probably not enough people truly of that persuasion who would be capable or willing to do that kind of introspection.

They could never entertain the idea that maybe they're wrong, or even experimentally believing that possibly they've been terribly lied to. That they're horribly scared and unable to express it for fear of seeming weak in the world's eyes. That maybe, just maybe, Obama would simply do a better job if they gave him a chance. That Mexicans have rights too, that English is spoken better in other countries and by non-native speakers, that speaking English doesn't make one superior. That we've been awfully gluttonous and irresponsible as a society for far too long.  . . read more

Why Haiti Can't Forget Its Past
17 apr  |  Why Haiti Can't Forget Its Past . . read more
Farewell to Easy Street
24 aug  |  The Olympics are over and after two weeks of enforced peace and harmony it's time to get back to reality. Psychotherapist RENATE OGILVIE counsels that bad economic times can actually lead to well-being and happiness. . . read more
The Internet Is Killing Our Culture
19 aug  |  Stephen Colbert interviews Andrew Keen, author of the book The Cult of the Amateur - How Today's Internet is Killing Our Culture. . . read more
Report Details Hacks Targeting Google, Others
4 feb  |  It’s been three weeks since Google announced that a sophisticated and coordinated hack attack dubbed Operation Aurora recently targeted it and numerous other U.S. companies.

Until now we’ve only known that the attackers got in through a vulnerability in Internet Explorer and that they obtained intellectual property and access to the Gmail accounts of two human rights activists whose work revolves around China. We also know a few details about how the hackers siphoned the stolen data, which went to IP addresses in Taiwan. About 34 mostly undisclosed companies were breached

Kim Zetter writing for WIRED explains more  . . read more

blogs   100words
 
By Sean Maguire

In comparison to other passages from Joseph Heller's Catch-22 it isn't often quoted, but it should be.

The haunting and beautifully simple piece reads:

'Man was matter, that was Snowden's secret. Drop him out a window and he'll fall. Set fire to him and he'll burn. Bury him and he'll rot, like other kinds of garbage. The spirit gone, man is garbage. That was Snowden's secret. Ripeness was all'.

The passage takes place after the protagonist Yossarian watches young Snowden die in the back of his plane. The event is repeatedly told throughout the novel always teasing at this great revelation that Yossarian had experienced- the revelation that 'man was matter'.

Not special, not a product of a breath of divinity but matter like everything else. 

After being in a potentially fatal car accident last week this line has been constantly coming back to me. I remember waking up just after the accident in a hospital with a doctor telling me I was having a cat-scan to check if I had brain damage.

Man was matter, and the centre of man (the mind) was also matter. We might generally conceive of the mind as somehow separate to the body- a floating you that is intangible and neverending, but in one fell swoop it can be brought back to what it really is: a fragile and spongy bit of tissue that can be destroyed in the stupidest and swiftest of seconds.