@simsa02

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I am a dishwasher, cleaner, lavatory attendant. Late at night, when the restaurant crew has left, the latrine faerie and I sing dirty duets.

This is an archive and backup account.
You can find me at @simsa03

Blog:https://simsa01.wordpress.com/
♪ Ehud Banai, סרט רץ www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7N9... Lovely echo of Bob Dylan's "Series of Dreams".

אהוד בנאי - סרט רץ
אהוד בנאי - סרט רץ

YouTube
omny.fm/shows/kan-en... This is a stellar interview w/ former Israel ambassador to the US, MichaelOren, & Israel public broadcaster Kan's host David Ze'ev. Insightful, to the point of the various complications that tie but also set apart the U.S. & Israel in the current war w/ Iran. Recommended.

The Trump-Netanyahu tightrope ...
The Trump-Netanyahu tightrope - Kan English

Former Israeli ambassador to the US Michael Oren says the dialogue between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump amounts to ensuring a Republican Party election victory in upcoming Congressional elections alongside ensuring that Israel can defend itself against its own security threats. Oren spoke to KAN's David Ze'ev. (Photo: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

i24news https://i24news.tv/en and #Israel public broadcaster Kan https://kan.org.il/content/kan/kan-reka/p-10861/ are good English language sources on politics, security, military, culture in Israel. (i24news seems more hawkish to me than Kan.)

sources

Deadly fogs, moralistic diatribes, debunked medical theory — in his essay “Bad Air” Brett Beasley explores The Doom of the Great City (1880), a piece of Victorian science fiction considered to be the first modern tale of urban apocalypse: https://publicdomainreview.org/essay/bad-air-pollution-sin-and-science-fiction-in-william-delisle-hay-s-the-doom-of-the-great-city-1880?utm_content=bufferb6f4d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
Petition gegen Digitalzwang | Digitalcourage

Wir fordern den Bundestag auf, ein Recht auf Leben ohne Digitalzwang ins Grundgesetz aufzunehmen. Zum 75. Jubiläum des Grundgesetzes starten wir eine

Digitalcourage
Can - Vitamin C (Official Audio)

YouTube
Finally falling into CAN... How could I've overlooked them for so long? I mean, I knew their name, their fame in what so awfully has been called "Krautrock", their influence on Anglo-Saxon musicians and bands like David Bowie, Brian Eno, Talking Heads, Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees...

And it is not that the avantgarde and progressive music scene in Germany between the mid 1960s to the mid 1970s eluded me, starting with Stockhausen and his pupils (Stockhausen, in a sense, being the godfather of Kraftwerk and Can). But I never really listened to the music of CAN.

What strikes me with CAN is in part their technical abilities and prowess, notably Jaki Liebezeit (drums), Holger Czukay (bass), Irmin Schmidt (keyboards). These were/are sophisticated musisicans, and it shows (or rather: sounds).

Listening to only a few records on YT, without having dived into their catalogue of records yet, I'm struck by the immediacy of their play. There is no distance between me as listener and them as musicians on the records. Liebezit's drum is on point, every beat direct, and directly into the ear.

Listening to younger, more recent productions, with all the emphasis on soundscape, rhythm, basslines, the immediacy of CAN's music is still unreached. CAN's productions are so sophisticated that one can easily forget that their main records are 50 to 60 years old. Timeless. Have a listen.
Illustrations from Albert Robida’s La vie électrique (1890). While the flying cars have not (yet) come to pass, Robida's imagining of life 60 years in the future includes many prescient visions, such as a proto Zoom, Netflix, hyperloop + smart doorbell: https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/albert-robida-la-vie-electrique

I cannot tell you what to do, watching the US president and his horrific regime trying to plunge the world into flame and darkness. I can’t tell you because I have no idea either.

All I can tell you is this:

You have to know, with total and completely clarity, that nobody is coming to save us.

And knowing that, you will feel lost — but strangely clear.

And suddenly the work will be on you.

And you will do it, because that is •just what you do•, because you •know• that nobody else is coming.

And you will still have no idea what to do, even as you are already doing it.

11/

I used to wonder whether, say, the French resistance or the Underground Railroad could ever form in the modern US today. I don’t wonder that anymore. I watched it happen. I made it happen. •We• made it happen. And my part was so small! And yet…we made it happen.

Because we knew that if we didn’t, nobody, nobody would.

10/