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Read Me, Love Me!!







Read Me, Love Me!!

Read Me, Love Me!! 08/09/2004 02:53 PM

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Read Me, Love Me!!

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22 Italians (funny, it only read 12 when
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cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/11/12/sprj.irq.main/index.html
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Read My Lips: Read My Lips Proudly
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Are You a Perpetual Bad Relationship
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Chris Abraham: Liberals Find Mad Love at
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chrisabraham.com/2005/06/liberals_find_m.html
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Boys love games, girls love ringtones


Boys love games, girls love ringtones 06/02/2004 10:08 AM
But neither gives a hoot for 3G

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love men


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mirror.co.uk

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Love Macs? Then Learn To Love Macsurfer


Love Macs? Then Learn To Love Macsurfer 05/19/2004 08:55 AM
It does a bang up job of providing the Apple community with interesting reads day in day out. By Hadley Stern, O'Reilly Network (via MyAppleMenu)

"Wait... they don't love you like I love
you" [sorry, got stuck in my head]


"Wait... they don't love you like I love
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03/25/2005 04:09 PM
Social Explorer. "Social Explorer is dedicated to providing demographic information in an easily understood format, data maps. We serve hundreds of interactive data maps of United States. Here, you can visually analyze and understand the demography of the U.S., explore your neighborhood and learn about the people that live around you."

If you read nothing else today - READ
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If you read nothing else today - READ
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03/13/2003 12:46 PM
great piece (full of the truth) .. The French Connection .. New York Times .. him seriously .. Bill Safire

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"If you read nothing else today - READ
THIS"


"If you read nothing else today - READ
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The Irish Have a New Jackass: If You
Like Dumb, Stupid and Funny Stuff, Then
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of Crazy Mental Irish guys Who Just Love
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Like Dumb, Stupid and Funny Stuff, Then
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of Crazy Mental Irish guys Who Just Love
to Party
03/22/2005 04:47 PM
The Americans have Jackass while the Irish have the Crazy mental team. These guys film all their stupid and funny stuff for our enjoyment, from driving a Ferrari 355 at breakneck speeds around the Hollywood hills in Los Angeles to drilling a hole in one of their arms with a hammer drill, these guys are really crazy. [PRWEB Mar 21, 2005]

Against Love: Love Politics Revisited


Against Love: Love Politics Revisited 03/22/2005 04:54 PM
PeterSteinerThe Idea: Author Laura Kipnis argues that monogamy is unnatural and unhealthy, and possibly complicit in our emotional detachment from political life and our ecosystem as well.

Laura Kipnis, despite the title of of her 200-page "polemic", is not Against Love. Rather, she's against the trappings, the rules, the rituals that our culture imposes on love relationships. She goes even further -- she sees marriage, the institution, as every bit as repressive, suffocating and unnatural as our mind-numbing employment in modern hierarchical organizations, and draws strong parallels between the slavery of the workplace and the slavery of the matrimonial home. These two canons of civilization: our need and responsibility to devote our daytime hours to meaningless subordinate labour, and our need and responsibility to devote the rest of our hours to boring, stifling and unsatisfying monogamy, work together diabolically to keep us suppressed, and in our 'place' in society. Small wonder, she says, that one of our most enduring conventional wisdoms is that "a good marriage takes work".

If this protestation against the rigours of monogamy, fidelity and marriage-slavery as the complement to wage-slavery sounds familiar, it's because it's very similar to the argument that Glenn Parton made in his essay posted first on these pages last year entitled "Love Politics". Glenn's argument is that we have become so emotionally numbed by our twin bondage to job and marriage that it has made our hearts cold and hard, uncaring of the plight of our planet and of others, and that this is a direct cause of the destruction of our world. "If I'm miserable, why should I care about anyone else?" Dare to love more than one person, he suggests, and the shackles of this self-imposed imprisonment are broken, and the inrush of emotion will shock us into awareness of, and eagerness to heal, the massive emotional and physical illness of our entire planet.

Why should we, why do we subject ourselves to this one-love-partner-slavery as easily and as passively as we do to wage-slavery? This is the subject of much of Ms. Kipnis' book. Her prose is so adept and so powerful I won't attempt to paraphrase her arguments. Here are a few teasers:

Is it the persistence of the work ethic that ties us to the compassionate couple and its workaday regimes, or is it the ethos of compassionate coupledom that ties us to sould-deadening work regimes...Resenting the boss? Feeling bored or overworked or dissatisfied? Getting complaints about your attitude? Whether it's "on the relationship" or "on the job" get yourself right to the therapist's office, pronto. There are only two possible diagnoses for all such modern ailments: it's going to be either "intimacy issues" or "authority issues". You'll soon discover that the disease doubles as the prescription at this clinic: You're just going to have to "work harder on yourself"...

Take the modern consumer. Clearly, routing desire into consumption would be necessary to sustain a consumer society -- a citizenry who fucked in lieu of shopping would soon bring the entire economy grinding to a standstill. Or better still, take the modern depressive. What a boon to both the modern pharmaceutical and the social-harmony industries that such a social type would be. These are merely hypotheticals of course, since it's not as if we live in a society of consumers and depressives, or as if the best strategy for the latter weren't widely held to be strategically indulging in the former -- "retail therapy"...Love's proper denouement, matrimony, is also of course the social form regulated by the state, which refashions itself as a benevolent pharmacist, doling out the addictive substance in licensed doses...What about re-envisioning [marriage] or... insisting that social resources and privileges not be allocated on the basis of marital status? No. let's demand regulation! Not that it's easy to re-envision anything when these intersections of love and acquiescence are the very backbone of the modern self, when every iota of self-worth and identity hinge on them...Domestic coupledom is the boot camp for compliant citizenship, a training ground for gluey resignation and immobility...

Ms. Kipnis suggests the same lack of innovation that permeates the workplace in the 21st century also permeates domestic institutions:

Different social norms could entail something entirely different: yearly renewable contracts for example. And if we weren't so emotionally yoked to the social forms we've inherited that trying to envision different ways of having a love life seems intellectually impossible and even absurd, who knows what other options might present themselves?...It behooves [our] society to convince its citizenry that wanting change means personal failure, starting over is shameful, and wanting more satisfaction than you have is illegitimate...As love has increasingly become the center of all emotional expression in the modern imagination -- the quantity without which life seems forlorn -- anxiety about obtaining it in sufficient quantities and for sufficient duration has increased to the point that that anxiety suffuses the population, and most of our cultural forms...Uncoupling [then] can only be experienced as ego-crushing crisis and inadequacy...[and] the grief of failed love is exacerbated by inevitable feelings of personal failure...

Much of the latter part of the book is focused on the psychological gymnastics of all three (or more) parties in the polygon of adultery, from the rationalization that hiding the affair is to protect the feelings of the cuckold, to the feelings of self-hatred and self-flagellation of the 'sinner(s)'. She also discusses the awkward mechanics of the ultimate break-up of either the marriage or the affair (or both), and the degree to which children of the relationship become hostages, or excuses for deception, or excuses for the boredom that gave rise to the deception. Of course the book also talks about famous infidelities in high political circles, and the twisted hypocrisy of conservatives' opposition to same-sex marriage, as well as the equal-opportunity-for-misery desire of lesbians and gays to gain access to the sad and repressive regulation of 'official' marriage rather than 'settling for' merely the legal and resource rights that come with equivalent-to-married status. And there's also a discussion of the pragmatic phenomenon of "serial monogamy" -- the fall-back that there's nothing wrong with marriage per se, it's just that we were all married to the wrong person.

All of this is complicated (even more) by the emergence of the Two-Income Trap, which imposes a financial prison on top of the emotional one in marriage. We have to stay together because we can't afford to live apart. I am convinced that this one factor is overwhelmingly responsible for keeping the rate of divorce from reaching astronomical levels. It is also probably helpful in keeping birth rates in the West below replacement levels -- Not only can we not afford children, we certainly don't want any (or any more) with the spouse we're economically shackled to. And having one with the secret love is just too messy. In my recent article predicting a baby boom, perhaps I underestimated the sheer perverseness of a socioeconomic system that not only makes parenthood financially reckless, it also suppresses fertility rates by its expressed moral repugnance for having a child by someone other than your boring spouse.

A lot of people, some of their own free will, and many more who have been pushed, have recently broken free of wage slavery and are now working, mostly for much less income, for themselves. That's probably a good thing in many ways -- it reduces the supply of the remaining wage slaves, which might actually, in time, allow them to bargain from a position of at least a bit of power. It increases self-sufficiency. It reduces excessive consumption. What if there were a similar revolution against marriage slavery? What if a whole generation just refused to define themselves (in more ways than one) as married, or to live with the constraints of monogamy, and instead opted for a polyamory life-style?

Paternity 'rights' and responsibilities would both probably suffer, as the new family unit would be a woman (or possibly, and more logically, a group of women, in self-selected community) and their children. They would have the power, and could strike whatever contract they chose with males who wanted the responsibilities and privileges of fatherhood. The nuclear family and the 'single-family dwelling' would disappear. Conjugal relations would not attach to parental responsibility, and could be negotiated between any two people as individuals on a one-shot basis, with no responsibility other than the responsibility to prevent unwanted pregnancy and disease. This would probably be bad for the oldest profession, as the supply/demand ratio for quick couplings would soar. Jealousy and the consequent domestic violence that is the scourge of our nuclear spouse-as-property society would, slowly (old habits die hard), disappear. I think the vast majority of men, driven by million-year-old biological imperatives, once they reached a certain age, would choose to attach themselves to one of the matriarchal communities (if so invited), and would do their share to provide for its well-being, in return for the company and sense of purpose that would bring.

We are told it takes a village, a community, to raise a child. Perhaps the community is necessary, and sufficient, for far more: To break us all free from both the emotionally numbing subjugation of wage-slavery and the misery and boredom of marriage-slavery. The community would then become truly self-sufficient in every respect, and we would be happier and freer than we can, or dare, imagine.

Cartoon: By Peter Steiner from The New Yorker, in the Cartoon Bank

I love Ferrari stuff. Got all stuff from
cap/jackets/T-shirts etc. Would love to
go for Ferrari Laptop. What's


I love Ferrari stuff. Got all stuff from
cap/jackets/T-shirts etc. Would love to
go for Ferrari Laptop. What's
07/14/2004 08:09 AM
TechTree Jul 14 2004 12:21PM GMT

"[Read more...]"


"[Read more...]" 02/14/2004 03:42 AM

"Read on"


"Read on" 06/08/2004 08:23 PM

"Read More..."


"Read More..." 02/19/2004 06:44 AM

"Read "


"Read " 03/13/2003 03:47 PM

Read all about it


Read all about it 06/07/2004 07:14 AM
National Post Jun 7 2004 12:07PM GMT

Do not read this


Do not read this 12/03/2003 01:44 AM
The NYT

nytimes.com/2003/12/01/international/middleeast/01MISS.html
track this site | 4 links


What to Read


What to Read 03/08/2004 11:07 PM
A man ages backward in the season's breakthrough literary event. Plus: An epic of love and violence in medieval Japan, swapping your old body for a hot young one, a sprawling social novel travels to the 1999 Seattle protests, and more.

This Is Where I Get My Read On


This Is Where I Get My Read On 04/20/2004 11:26 AM
This Is Where I Get My Read On Just in case MTV Cribs was coming to your, uh, crib.

If you can read this ...


If you can read this ... 02/01/2005 10:08 PM
I have just switched from a Norwegian hosting company to DreamHost, with their Code Monster plan with 7680MB disk space, and 192GB transfer per month, and these are my experiences with switching.

Some of them can read


Some of them can read 04/01/2005 02:22 PM
"Rats that survive to the age of four are the wisest and the most cynical beast s on earth. A trap means nothing to them, no matter how skillfully set. They just kick it around until it snaps; then they eat the bait. And they can detect poisoned bait a yard off. I believe some of them can read." Also, they're athletes

Read it to Me 2.0


Read it to Me 2.0 06/15/2004 03:17 PM
A tool that allows users to listen to RSS news on an iPod.

Read it to Me


Read it to Me 06/15/2004 10:11 AM
Developers Wanted

"I might read this one day"


"I might read this one day" 03/31/2005 11:54 PM

"Read More... "


"Read More... " 05/12/2004 09:38 AM

Read Me!


Read Me! 10/22/2002 06:54 PM
Parsing of this feed failed. Email me at rss@them.ws with the name of the feed and the time the error occured.

New bl0g for a mag too new to read


New bl0g for a mag too new to read 04/09/2004 04:12 PM
Worthwhile Magazine doesn't exist yet, but that hasn't stopped it from starting up its blog, under Halley's editorial eye. It's an interesting model for a print magazine aiming at the big time market: Blog first! Worthwhile is about what makes work worthwhile. Its editors - Anita Sharpe and Kevin Salwen - each with serious editorial experience and credentials, are prepping the first issue. I'm proud to be a contributor to the Worthwhile blog, along with Tom Peters, Halley, David Batsone, Rebecca Ryan, Kate Yandoh, and Anita and Kevin. My first three entries are on why massages are like bad jobs,...

Attention: Read this


Attention: Read this 04/12/2004 07:37 AM
ZDNet Apr 12 2004 12:02PM GMT

Prices are down: Read this now


Prices are down: Read this now 04/12/2004 08:38 AM
ZDNet Apr 12 2004 12:23PM GMT

"Read The Rest?"


"Read The Rest?" 04/12/2004 10:00 PM

Whatever You Do, Don't Read This...
(Reuters)


Whatever You Do, Don't Read This...
(Reuters)
04/05/2005 09:18 AM
Reuters - Tony Troiano grimaced as he was lifted off the floor by giant fishhooks pierced through the skin on his shoulders.

"go read Duncan"


"go read Duncan" 03/24/2005 12:08 AM

Read Up on Retirement


Read Up on Retirement 04/18/2005 09:57 AM
A comfortable and happy retirement is a few pages away.

People like to read on the web


People like to read on the web 11/10/2003 11:19 PM
A List Apart: A Fairy, a Low-Fat Bagel, and a Sack of Hammers. “People were reading and writing. Frowning and laughing. Crying and cheering. Agreeing and disagreeing.”

"Who Will Read Newspapers?"


"Who Will Read Newspapers?" 05/30/2004 08:39 PM

Read Between the Lines


Read Between the Lines 04/07/2005 05:56 AM
We're all awash in books, blogs, and reports to keep up in our jobs. Can speed-reading software help us be more productive?

The Net ad you're about to see has read
your e-mail


The Net ad you're about to see has read
your e-mail
06/21/2004 09:16 AM
Source: News.com - Google has created what is the electronic equivalent of a television network's standards and practices department to determine which e-mail messages are suitable for ads and which are not....
Grok Description matches for Read Me, Love Me!!
GrokA matches for Read Me, Love Me!!

Read Me, Love Me!!

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