The Fungus

A ‘Think Tank’ blog that promotes the spreading of Peace, Love, Creativity, Awareness, Knowledge, Wisdom, Happiness and Purpose

Archive for the ‘Art’ Category

How creativity is being strangled by the law.

Posted by thefungus on February 17, 2009

Posted in Art, Video, machine | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

John Frusciante’s New Album The Empyrean

Posted by thefungus on February 16, 2009

 

One of the greatest musicians alive, John Frusciante discusses some of his ideas on his latest album, The Empyrean…

Imrael

 

Lyrically this record became a concept album and was not initially written that way though I had a clear idea of what sort of things I wanted to write about.  I did not write the songs as a character but as myself. The form revealed itself as it took shape and I added songs to complete the flow I perceived. I also left off two songs since the singer’s words were somewhat from the inside out. All the remaining songs lyrical viewpoint is from the inside in. They are very personal, hence my being uncomfortable talking about them in any specific terms.  Even in the long “description” I wrote, I’m being very cagey. The actual experience was, and is, very specific and did not involve anything vague. But to explain it in plain terms would serve no purpose other than to make me look insane to people who have no correlating inner experience. What I’ve said so far is vague insomuch as it has to be to be open and universal. But I’ve said enough to where anyone who has had a similar inner experience may be gently directed towards finding some clarity in areas, which are confusing. I’m sharing it to the degree I am because I have, at times, been so lost in the course of my life, and have been gently directed towards making sense of lots of confusing things from reading certain writers and from obsessing on lyrics of rock songs about this same subject, of which I believe there to be many, though perhaps often unbeknownst to the writers of the songs themselves.

We are all reaching up in our own way and so even when we choose concrete things as the object of our desire, I feel that they are only symbols and that the real object of our desire is the creative force inherent in everything. It is what created us and perpetuates our lives, and so our creations are its creations.   Kind of like if you built a robot that could think and feel, and then it painted a picture, that picture would be the result of the precise structure of thought and feeling you endowed the robot with. We’re all grateful for what we’ve been given. Even when we are unhappy with everything, its “poor me”, showing that we still think of that “me” and its feelings, as having a lot of significance. It’s a pretty amazing thing to have this complex network of thought and feeling in these bodies. From where does it come?  We’ve traced the cause of matter to something that required the preexistence of time, the principles of motion, space and many other things. The laws of motion, time and the space everything exists into, all have an untraced cause. And likewise we don’t have any idea where things like perception and thought came from.  So why anything whatsoever exists, whether as actuality or potential, is unknown. I just attribute all these things to the creative force, since, though its essence is unknown, it is in plain view inside each one of us. And it becomes clearer the more generative and positive a persons thoughts and actions are, until it doesn’t seem unknown at all. Our own creative nature is a small version of the creative force we owe existence to, so we can understand that force for ourselves just by doing creative acts.

The life giving properties that the suns rays contain is something we imitate ourselves, whether by smiling at someone or telling a joke, or singing a song. It is a human need when you feel something inside to express it outwardly. And that life giving substance the sun shines out is a lot like our own creative actions. The sun is telling us that if you repeat an action every day (like learning something, playing something or making something), the object of your efforts will grow and grow. Your ability to express yourself or to give to the world around you will grow with your persistence in doing whatever that thing is you do. And even though the sun appears to go up and down, having its process of apparently rising up, peaking, going down, and then hiding, science has taught us that this only appears this way to our point of view and it is circling around, and shining at full strength always. Likewise our own ups and downs just appear as they do to us. In actuality we are thriving all the time.  Everything we do is directed towards shining our form of light.  We couldn’t do it if we were just peaking all the time, just as life as we know it would end if the sun always stayed at what appears to us as its highest point of strength. A person could never exceed at something if they just did it once in a while, it’s a hint and half that the thing we owe our existence to repeats its rounds every day. Persistence is an incredibly potent thing. We are lucky that life isn’t like dreams, in which the result of our actions is lost by the next dream. Here we have the ability to build a thing from day to day, whether it is skill at something or an actual edifice. Whether in the physical world or in our minds, this principle stands. We read one page of a book, and upon reading the next page its events appear to us as following the last one. In music, one note leads to the next, the new one heard in relationship to the ones, which preceded it. Or we learn the basics of something and then gradually learn that subjects complexities. These gifts are ours to do whatever we want with.

Trying and giving up go hand in hand. But it’s trying that deserves the attention of our will. Giving up is just breathing out. Breathing in is the one we need to remember to do.  Breathing out naturally follows. The important thing is just to keep breathing. To try and then just go through all that happens, including not trying. And so we hold our breath sometimes. These things aren’t problems. They are just living. As long as the message you send yourself is that it is important to you to be guided by the creative force inside you, in the long run you are on the same path as the sun. Of course you’ll seem to go up and down, and be in darkness and light. That’s life. The reality of it is that you are a shining star circling through space all the time. So by making your own circular actions (doing some creative or educational activity consistently) you will naturally become more of what you really are. And you are that already. It’s just a game to learn to be it more completely amidst environment, and the illusions of constant change and separateness. One entirety of everything is all there is, ever was, and ever will be.

Posted in Art, Sounds, love, poetry | Leave a Comment »

Bill C-10 and Canada’s film industry

Posted by thefungus on April 12, 2008

A scene from the controversial upcoming film Young People F---ing. Productions like this one might be in jeopardy if the Canadian Senate passes the Conservative government's Bill C-10. (Copperheart Entertainment)
A scene from the controversial upcoming film Young People F—ing. Productions like this one might be in jeopardy if the Canadian Senate passes the Conservative government’s Bill C-10. (Copperheart Entertainment)

What is Bill C-10?

Bill C-10 is an omnibus bill amending the Income Tax Act and contains a series of amendments affecting a variety of different industries, funds and individuals. It has been passed by the House of Commons and is now before the Senate.

The issue that concerns Canada’s film and television community is Section 120, which would allow the Heritage Minister (currently Josée Verner) to withdraw tax credits from productions determined to be “contrary to public policy.”

How would it work?

The minister would create a set of guidelines for film and television producers. The guidelines have not yet been established but would cover violence, hatred and sexual content in film and TV productions, or anything else the minister believes should not be financed by Canadian taxpayers. Committees within the heritage and justice departments would be charged with vetting productions and implementing the guidelines. Any film or television program found to have contravened the guidelines could have its tax credits withdrawn and might be asked to repay funding given through Telefilm, the federal film funding agency, or the Canadian Television Fund, the federal funding agency for TV.

“Bill C-10 has nothing to do with censorship and everything to do with the integrity of the tax system,” Heritage Minister Josee Verner has said. “The goal is to ensure public trust in how tax dollars are spent.”

Who is in favour of C-10?

The federal Conservative party; conservative religious leaders including Charles McVety, president of the Canada Family Action Coalition; lobby groups such as Canadians Concerned about Violence in Entertainment and Real Women of Canada.

Who opposes it?

Canada’s creative community, including the producers’ associations, the performers’ union ACTRA, the Writers Guild of Canada, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, as well as all the opposition parties. Some members of the Senate are against it, including Wilfred Moore, who has asked, “Are we trying to solve a problem that doesn’t exist?”.

What are their concerns?

The film and television industry is concerned Bill C-10 would restrict the kinds of movies and TV shows that can be made in this country. The Writers Guild of Canada says writers would be forced to self-censor and second-guess how a government committee might respond to any given production. There is also concern that the minister has the power to set a community standard for the whole country.

Screenwriter Rebecca Schechter, president of the Writers Guild of Canada, said the bill will “put a chill on the entire film industry.”

“What the guidelines will do is force writers to self-censor,” she told the Senate committee examining Bill C-10. “They will be trying to decide how much violence is appropriate and whether the sexuality shown will meet the criteria for educational purposes.”

The Canadian industry has given rise to controversial works such as The Boys of St. Vincent and The Valour and the Horror and violent yet critically acclaimed films such as David Cronenberg’s Eastern Promises. Enforcing a steady diet of innocuous family-friendly productions would result in a less vibrant industry and force Canadian talent to go elsewhere, says actor and director Sarah Polley. Polley said her own film, Away from Her, could not have found funding under the proposed new rules.

“To say to us, ‘Well, you can replace the government tax credit with private money,’ has no basis in reality,” she told the Senate committee. “When you are telling us to make it with private money, you are telling us to leave the country if we want to making anything remotely controversial.”

What are the existing rules for publicly funded films?

Pornography is already excluded from receiving government financing and tax credits. Productions that are contrary to the Criminal Code, including child pornography and content that contravenes Canadian hate laws, also do not qualify.

There are already vetting mechanisms to weed out such films at Telefilm, at provincial funding agencies and through the broadcast system, in which broadcasters demand work for a specific audience or in a particular genre.

What are the possible effects on the film-financing system?

Canada’s independent film and television creators apply for tax credits to help support financing of a production before it is made. Banks lend money to producers based on both the expected return from the work and the expected tax credit due to the producer. Co-producers, including international investors, also consider such credits when providing financing. The tax credit usually doesn’t come until 18 months later.

Producers say uncertainty over whether the credits will be honoured could mean lenders would not be willing to back Canadian films and TV. Film- and television-makers say the system will collapse if the government can retroactively withdraw tax credits or force producers to repay grant money from organizations such as Telefilm or the Canadian Television Fund.

The Canadian Film and Television Production Association estimates film and TV production is worth $5 billion to the Canadian economy and employs 127,000 people.

What are the rules for foreign productions?

Foreign productions, including U.S. films and television made in Canada and employing Canadian crew, would not be covered by the provisions that withdraw tax credits. Canadian film- and television-makers say this is a double standard that places Canadian productions at a disadvantage.

The government says foreign productions should be exempt, because they do not get tax credits for Canadian content but have been a force for building the Canadian industry.

Posted in Art, machine | 1 Comment »

Climbers scale Golden Gate Bridge to protest Olympic torch run

Posted by thefungus on April 7, 2008

Three people protesting China’s human rights record and the impending arrival of the Olympic torch climbed the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco on Monday and tied a Tibetan flag and two banners to its cables.
(Paul Sakuma/Associated Press)

Three pro-Tibet protesters climbed the suspension cables of the Golden Gate Bridge on Monday to protest the coming arrival of the Beijing Olympics torch relay in San Francisco.

The protesters, tethered together on the suspension cables halfway up the bridge, unfurled two giant banners reading “One World, One Dream” and “Free Tibet ‘O8″ — a play on the official slogan of the Beijing Games. One of the climbers also displayed a Tibetan flag.

The climbers spent about three hours suspended more than 25 metres above traffic before descending around 1:15 p.m. PT to be taken into police custody, the CBC’s Chris Brown reported from the city.

The climbers are all American citizens and supporters of Students for a Free Tibet, said Tsering Lama, a spokeswoman for the activist group.

Four other members, including a Canadian student who attends the University of British Columbia, were arrested at the site, Lama told CBC News.

All seven face charges related to trespassing, conspiracy and causing a public nuisance, CNN reported.

The torch is due to arrive Wednesday in San Francisco, its only North American stop on a tour that has been marked by protests against China’s policies toward Tibet and Sudan.

The highly visible protest has forced San Francisco officials to make some changes to the torch procession, and police said they were taking “extraordinary precautions,” the CBC’s Brown said.

“All in all, it’s going to be a very sizable police presence,” he said.

Last leg of Olympic torch run cancelled in Paris

Meanwhile Monday, the last segment of the Olympic torch run through Paris was cancelled after thousands of anti-China protesters repeatedly prompted officials to stop the procession, extinguish the flame and put the torch aboard a bus.

Despite beefed-up security, the relay had to be suspended at least five times as demonstrators threatened the torch. A vehicle carried the Olympic flame for the last part of the route but a runner was allowed to carry the torch for the final five metres into a sports stadium in the south of Paris.

At least 28 people were arrested during the relay as thousands of people including demonstrators lined the torch’s route through the city streets.

The protesters, tethered together on the suspension cables halfway up the bridge, unfurled two giant banners reading “One World, One Dream” and “Free Tibet ‘O8″ — a play on the official slogan of the Beijing Games. One of the climbers also displayed a Tibetan flag.

The climbers spent about three hours suspended more than 25 metres above traffic before descending around 1:15 p.m. PT to be taken into police custody, the CBC’s Chris Brown reported from the city.

The climbers are all American citizens and supporters of Students for a Free Tibet, said Tsering Lama, a spokeswoman for the activist group.

Four other members, including a Canadian student who attends the University of British Columbia, were arrested at the site, Lama told CBC News.

All seven face charges related to trespassing, conspiracy and causing a public nuisance, CNN reported.

The torch is due to arrive Wednesday in San Francisco, its only North American stop on a tour that has been marked by protests against China’s policies toward Tibet and Sudan.

The highly visible protest has forced San Francisco officials to make some changes to the torch procession, and police said they were taking “extraordinary precautions,” the CBC’s Brown said.

“All in all, it’s going to be a very sizable police presence,” he said.

Posted in Actions, Art, Human Rights, empire, machine, resistance | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

The Beautiful Game taken to new heights

Posted by thefungus on March 25, 2008

Check out the mad skill on these boyz….

Posted in Art, love | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

John Frusciante

Posted by thefungus on March 10, 2008

I remember buying my first chili peppers album in 1991, and listening for hours to Frusciante’s guitar playing. He was just 21 when he wrote and recorded the album, along with the other RHCP members. An amazing artist who is able to create music that truly comes from the soul, I thought I’d post this video/ photo collage that someone made to his song, “Anne” to bring back a little bit of real music in our lives. The photos definitely reveal a lot about Frusciante, providing a little insight into the mystique of the man who’s music reflect a tortured yet beautiful soul. He has come a long way on his personal journey, and if you’re interested more in Frusciante and his unique approach to music and life in general, I recommend you check him out more.

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Eddie Vedder: “Society”

Posted by thefungus on March 8, 2008

This is probably my favourite track from Eddie Vedder’s solo soundtrack for the incredible movie, “Into the Wild”.  Someone put some visuals to the music. Here’s the lyrics:

Oh it’s a mystery to me.
We have a greed, with which we have agreed…
and you think you have to want more than you need…
until you have it all, you won’t be free.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.

When you want more than you have, you think you need…
and when you think more then you want, your thoughts begin to bleed.
I think I need to find a bigger place…
cause when you have more than you think, you need more space.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.
Society, crazy indeed…
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.

There’s those thinkin’ more or less, less is more,
but if less is more, how you keepin’ score?
It means for every point you make, your level drops.
Kinda like you’re startin’ from the top…
and you can’t do that.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.
Society, crazy indeed…
I hope you’re not lonely, without me
Society, have mercy on me.
I hope you’re not angry, if I disagree.
Society, crazy indeed.
I hope you’re not lonely…
without me.

Posted in Art, Consumption/Consumerism, Environment, Video, machine, poetry | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

“LOVE” – in the words of our youth

Posted by thefungus on February 10, 2008

I received this poem from one of the most inspirational 14 year olds one could ever meet after I lectured about the importance of love in one of my lessons. Too often we adults do not give children enough credit; we believe their values and ideals are naive and unattainable. I beg to differ….

“Love is kind and generous;

It is not jealousy or envy

Love is happy

Love is family and friends

Love is not hatred

It is not anger

Love is medicine, not sickness

Love is not opaque, but transparent.

Love is making the right choices

Based on your own judgement

It is not patronizing each other to do wrong.

Love is patient and affectionate

Love is loyal and honest.

Love is not lying to make yourself more interesting

Instead, love is peaceful and strong…

Everlasting- never ending

Love is true

Not false

Love is right

Not wrong.

Love is being thankful

For what you have and always will have.

Love is brave

and beautiful

Because it is what makes the world go ’round.

Love is forgiveness

It is not reminding a person of their mistakes

Or holding grudges against our loved ones.

Love is respect

Because if one does not respect himself,

One will not be respected by any other creature.

Love is safe

Not harmful.

Love is responsible

Your are responsible for the one(s) you adore.

Love is not fame or fortune.

Love cannot be bought

Otherwise we would be chasing dimes

And losing treasures.

Love is like nature-

It must be nurtured

Like any other good soul;

Love is like a blazing flame-

Golden and full of warmth.

Love only vanishes

when the night stops following the day.

Love is dedication

And commitment.

Appreciating

and embracing

Your time with each other.

If ever, love were to

Stop-

….. Our lives would no longer be worth living.”

 

Posted in Art, The Goodness, love, poetry | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

The Whale Hunt

Posted by Change the Game on February 6, 2008

The Whale Hunt / by Jonathan Harris

http://thewhalehunt.org/ 

 The Whale Hunt / by Jonathan Harris

Statement:

The Whale Hunt is an experiment in human storytelling.

In May 2007, I spent nine days living with a family of Inupiat Eskimos in Barrow, Alaska, the northernmost settlement in the United States. The first several days were spent in the village of Barrow, exploring ramshackle structures, buying gear, and otherwise helping the whaling crew to prepare for the hunt. We then traveled by snowmobile out onto the frozen Arctic Ocean, where we camped three miles from shore on thick pack ice, pitching our tents about ten feet from the open water. Boats were readied, harpoons prepared, whaling guns loaded, white tunics donned, a snow fence constructed, and then we sat silently in the -22 °F air, in constant daylight, waiting for whales to appear.

The purpose of this project was threefold:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Art | Tagged: , , , | 7 Comments »

Plastic Bottles

Posted by thefungus on January 29, 2008

plasticbottles1.jpg

Depicts two million plastic beverage bottles, the number used in the US every five minutes.

Posted in Art, Consumption/Consumerism, Environment | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Alice in Wonderland

Posted by thefungus on January 9, 2008

Caterpillar: A e i o u, a e i o u, a e i o u, o, u e i o a, u e i a, a e i o u... Who are you?

Alice: I- I- I hardly know, sir! I changed so many times since this morning, you see…

Caterpillar: I do not see. Explain yourself.

Alice: Why, I’m afraid I can’t explain myself, sir, because I’m not myself, you know…

Caterpillar: I do not know.

Alice: Well, I can’t put it anymore clearly for it isn’t clear to me!

Caterpillar: You? Who are you?

Alice: Well, don’t you think you ought to tell me- cough-cough, cough-cough, who you are first?

Caterpillar: Why?

Alice: Oh dear. Everything is so confusing.

Caterpillar: It is not.

Alice: Well, it is to me.

Caterpillar: Why?

Alice: Well, I can’t remember things as I used to, and…

Caterpillar: Recite.

Alice: Hmm? Oh! Oh, oh, yes, sir! Um… how doth the little busy bee, improve each such

Caterpillar: Stop! That is not spoken correcitically. It goes: how

Alice: He he he!

Caterpillar: Hmm! How doth the little crocodile improve his shining tail. And pour the waters of the Nile, on every golden scale. How cheer… how cheer… Ahem!

Alice: Ha ha ha!

Caterpillar: How cheerfully he seems to grin, how neatly spreads his claws. And welcomes little fishes in, with gently smiling jaws.

Alice: Well I must say I’ve never heard it that way before…

Caterpillar: I know, I have improved it.

Alice: Well, cough-cough, if you ask me…

Caterpillar: You? Huh, who are you?

Alice: Cough-cough, cough-cough, A-choo! Oh!

Caterpillar: You there! Girl! Wait! Come back! I have something important to say!

Alice: Oh dear. I wonder what he wants now. Well…?

Caterpillar: Keep your temper!

Alice: Is that all?

Caterpillar: No. Exacitically, what is your problem?

Alice: Well, it’s exacitici-, exaciti-, well, it’s precisely this: I should like to be a little larger, sir.

Caterpillar: Why?

Alice: Well, after all, three inches is such a wretched height, and…

Caterpillar: I am exacitically three inches high, and it is a very good height indeed!

Alice: But I’m not used to it. And you needn’t shout! Oh dear!

Caterpillar: By the way, I have a few more helpful hints. One side will make you grow taller…

Alice: One side of what?

Caterpillar: …and the other side will make you grow shorter.

Alice: The other side of what?

Caterpillar: The mushroom, of course!!

Posted in Art | 1 Comment »

Wreck Beach – Dec 15, 2007

Posted by thefungus on December 16, 2007

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Posted in Art, Environment | 2 Comments »

Immortal Technique – Failla

Posted by thefungus on December 15, 2007

BIO:

Felipe Coronel (born February 19, 1978), better known as Immortal Technique, is a hip hop MC and political activist. He is of Afro-Peruvian descent and was raised in Harlem, New York. Most of his lyrics focus on socio-political issues. The views expressed in his lyrics are largely a mixture of commentary on issues such as poverty, religion, and racism. He also focuses on the harsh resulting realities of criminality in the housing projects of New York City’s slums.

Although he has been offered a deal with at least one major record label,[1][2] he has never signed to any. Immortal Technique has voiced a desire to keep control over his production, and has made statements in his music that he is very aware that it is record companies, not the artists themselves, who profit the most from mass production and marketing of music.

He releases his music through, and is also the president of, Viper Records. However, to reach wider audiences, Immortal Technique’s next projects will be distributed by Babygrande Records.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immortal_Technique

Posted in Art, empire, machine, poetry, resistance | Tagged: , , | 1 Comment »

Imperialism’s impact on ‘the other’? When $2000 Holt Renfrew high heels take on a new meaning…

Posted by thefungus on November 29, 2007

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” PULITZER PRIZE ” winning photo taken in 1994 during the Sudan famine.
The picture depicts a famine stricken child crawling towards an United Nations food camp, located a kilometer away.
The vulture is waiting for the child to die so that it can eat it. This picture shocked the whole world. No one knows what happened to the child, including the photographer Kevin Carter who left the place as soon as the photograph was taken.
Three months later he committed suicide due to depression.

Posted in Art, Human Rights, empire, racism | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Does imperialism have any moral fibre whatsoever?

Posted by thefungus on November 28, 2007

463px-punch_rhodes_colossus.pngCecil Rhodes: the man who financed the Cape-Cairo railway project, founded the De Beers Mining Company, and owned the British South Africa Company which established Rhodesia for itself. He wanted to “paint the map British Red” and declared “…all of these stars … these vast worlds that remain out of reach. If I could, I would annex other planets”.

Posted in Art, Human Rights, empire | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Posted by thefungus on November 28, 2007

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Posted in Actions, Art, Consumption/Consumerism, Environment, Human Rights, empire, machine | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

21st Century Imperialism

Posted by thefungus on November 28, 2007

IMPERIALISM…. the conceptual reality of conquering foreign territory in the name of political and economic dominance, for the desire of ‘empire building’, requires at its most fundamental level a subdued racial prejudice. One of the most dominant political forces of our time, imperialism has been, and continues to be, in a state of perpetual change. Once blatantly obvious, imperialism has survived through its ability to evolve. Imperialism is a well oiled machine that realizes it can no longer prevail unless it works in the shadows, behind the scenes; whereas once you sent your explorers overseas, dominated local tribes with your military might, established colonies, exploited natural resources and created new markets, we now send our bankers to G7 meetings or WTO forums and simply create global economic policies that continue to serve the same empire building objectives that traditional forms of imperialism did (prosperity for the powerful at the expense of ‘the other’). What traditional imperialism and newer forms of economic and political dominance have in common is a reliance on an inherent form of racism that allows the population of the prosperous nations to feel a sense of greater entitlement than the people who populate the countries we continue to exploit. Fanatical patriotism erodes our ability to feel empathy for ‘the other’; separated by seas, by differences in culture and belief, by skin colour, these differences are perpetuated by imaginary social barriers that the ‘empire builder’ has constructed over time and engrained in our culture. How is it that 3 families can have more wealth than the poorest 48 countries combined? How is it that we in the west do not feel a moral sense of obligation to our brothers and sisters in Bolivia, in Nigeria, in Lithuania, in Burma? Patriotism is so deep and engrained that to question the direction and the moral fibre of one’s nation is to be ‘unpatriotic’. Without social support networks to reinforce one’s convictions, it is very difficult to stand out in a crowd where your beliefs, ethics and morality will see you chastised. Blind faith in the direction and leadership in our leaders without questioning the consequences of their actions on our country or on the countries of others is anything but patriotic; we need to encourage debate, we need to encourage and challenge people to seek a new direction, we need to encourage people to realize that dissent in the name of real progress is a fundamental responsibility for every citizen fortunate enough to live within a democracy.

Peace and Love to all,

D-Fungus

Posted in Art, empire, machine | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Posted by thefungus on November 19, 2007

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Posted in Art, fungus | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Live Cheap

Posted by thefungus on November 12, 2007

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Posted in Art, Consumption/Consumerism, buy nothing day | Leave a Comment »