View of a room made out of recycled plastic that the company 'Kuadro'
used to manufacture low-cost houses in Tlajomulco, Mexico.
Mexican engineers from the western state of Jalisco use recyclable
plastic waste to build green homes that are easy to transport, set up
and are durable.
Some good news! Here's a company in Mexico (Published on Oct 12, 2012 by ReutersVideo. ) building houses made of recycled
waste plastic collected by trucks on their weekly rounds. The company,
called Kuadro Ecological Solutions, says it is making the most of waste
that would otherwise end up in landfills, while providing inexpensive
housing at the same time.
"The Affresol house is a unique and effective way of building high
quality homes using TPR™, which will offer a real and cost effective
opportunity to the thousands of people who are currently unable to get
onto the first rung of the “housing ladder”. The Affresol houses are specifically aimed at providing spacious, 2, 3, and 4 bedroom quality homes for lower income families."
And how about this house in Serbia, made from recycled plastics? Or the ones below? Human ingenuity, how I love it!
Here's an incredible sculpture by Damien Hirstbeing erected in Devon, U.K. (Thanks again to Robert Moore for kindly sharing this). "Verity" is 65 feet tall, bronze, and stands with a raised sword, pregnant, with foetus, tissue, and bones "beneath the skin" revealed on one side of the sculpture's body. It is causing a lot of controversy of course, some locals apparently even worrying it will encourage teenage pregnancy, which I don't get at all.
What a brave, monumental sculpture! "Verity" means "Truth", and the raised sword is a gesture of power, like the sword of Kali, that cuts away what must go to reveal the truth, and to create justice. She is very pregnant, pregnant with those who are still to come. They need, especially now, protection, justice, and truth if they are going to have a future at all.
I don't understand why the artist chose to"remove the skin" on one side of the sculpture, although I think of the work of Alex and Allyson Grey, the Sacred Mirrors, in which Grey, who is an anatomical illustrator, removed the "skins" on his figures to gradually reveal the different dimensions of life, from the physical to the spiritual and esoteric bodies.
By
Daily Mail Reporter PUBLISHED:
08:55 EST, 8 October 2012
|
UPDATED:
17:26 EST, 8 October 2012 Some call it the Angel of the West; others deride it as the Belly of the South. But,
whether they like it or loathe it, the people of Ilfracombe are now the
custodians of this giant Damien Hirst sculpture – and they’ll be
looking at it for the next two decades. The
25-ton bronze statue of a heavily pregnant woman holding a sword,
arrived in the Devon seaside resort yesterday on a flatbed trailer.
Dropping in: Damien Hirst's bronze statue of a pregnant woman, called Verity, has arrived in Ilfracombe, Devon
Huge: The statue is to be placed on the harbour front and stands at 65ft and weighs over 25 tonnes
Hundreds of residents came out to
catch their first glimpse of the work, which will take more than a week
to assemble and install. Fans call it a ‘modern allegory of truth and
justice’, but many townsfolk say it is ‘obscene and disgusting’.
On one side the woman’s skin is peeled
back, revealing her skull, muscles and foetus – bringing accusations
that the work is grotesque.
Complaints: Some local residents are upset about Verity, calling her obscene and claiming she could encourage teenage pregnancy
Hirst’s 65ft statue, called Verity,
has been loaned to the local authority by the artist for 20 years and
will stand by the town’s pier.
Dozens wrote to the council to object,
with one saying it would ‘encourage teenage pregnancies’.Another said it was ‘demeaning to
women’ while a third claimed it was ‘eccentricity posturing as art’. Verity’s frame is a single piece of
stainless steel. The bronze exterior was cast in more than 40 pieces
while the sword and upper arm are made from a single piece of glass
fibre reinforced polymer.
I felt this article was important to share.More proof that lobbying really does work, and if they have their way we'll not only eat "Frankenstein" foods, but we'll not be free to demand that they be labeled so we at least know what we're putting on the plate.(Thanks to Janie Rezner for this article).
A Farm Bill Only Monsanto Could Love
By Corey Hill, Yes! Magazine
05 October 12
Three provisions in the bill would make it more
difficult to regulate the safety of genetically modified crops.
Consumers fight back with a flurry of organizing.
idden among the cluttered news cycle of this election season is a crucial debate about genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
September 30 marked the expiration of the 2007 Farm
Bill, and the 2012 replacement is now sitting in the House of
Representatives. It is unlikely that Congress will vote on the bill
until after the elections, so food-safety advocates are ramping up their
outreach efforts around this issue in advance of any decision.
What's the big deal with the new bill? Most
importantly, the House version of the 2012 Farm Bill contains three
industry-friendly provisions, numbered 10011, 10013, and 10014.
Collectively, they have come to be known as the "Monsanto Rider," and
the name is entirely appropriate. If passed, this bill would make it
more difficult to stem the tide of GMO foods hitting store shelves.
These three provisions in the 2012 Farm Bill would
grant regulatory powers solely to the United States Department of
Agriculture, preventing other federal agencies from reviewing GMO
applications and preventing the USDA from accepting outside money for
further study. The bill would also shorten the deadline for approval to
one year, with an optional 180-day extension.
And here's the kicker: the approval time bomb. If the
USDA misses the truncated review deadline, the GMO in question is
granted automatic approval.
Though the average time for approval of GMO
applications is now three years, the USDA has never denied a single one.
Environmental activists currently have the ability to delay
introduction of an iffy crop by keeping approval held up for months at a
time pending further review. If the 2012 Farm Bill is approved with the
Monsanto Rider, this tool is removed from the arsenal.
Food-safety advocates like the Organic Consumer Association point to polling
that shows nine out of ten American consumers want GMO labeling, and to
the strength of the organizing in favor of GMO labeling through
California's Proposition 37 ballot initiative. The Organic Consumers Association and allied organizations like the Center for Food Safety
are calling upon their membership base to let their elected officials
know where they stand on this issue, through phone calls, letter
writing, and protest.
"People understand that the GMO foods entering our
food supply have not been safety tested," said Alexis Baden-Mayer,
Political Director at the Organic Consumers Association. "There isn't
enough science backing them, and people want to know when food is
genetically engineered. That opinion is very strong, and hopefully
members of congress will be paying attention to the widespread
opposition, and they'll connect with voters. Hopefully, they'll
understand that [voters] matter more than the campaign donors."
Here's a feast for the eyes and imagination!Archedream for Humankind is a black light mask dance theater company that seeks to evoke “archetypes”. The Philadelphia-based group has performed in internationally, although I was fortunate to see them perform at Starwood Festival in New York in 2008.
The troupe was founded by South African native Alan Bell.
Growing up in the age of apartheid, he resolved to find an art form that
would unify the racially divided audience. In the 70's he fled to
Amsterdam where he discovered the power of the tradition of mask theater
to convey universal truths in a dreamlike
way.
"By combining the bold subtleties of mask theatre with the medium of
black light, Alan has discovered a method to bridge his African roots
and inherited European and American culture to create archetypal theatre
that transforms by relieving audiences of suppressed feelings that is
at the root of our alienation from one another."
In 2000, Alan and Glenn Weikert, a multimedia artist,
founded ArcheDream For Humankind in Philadelphia. UV light accentuates the supernatural
aspect of its performance.
"ArcheDream uses archetypal characters
that perform allegories, or dreams, to personify vital issues pertaining
to our lives. Psychologically speaking, an archetype is a primordial
mental image inherited by all. For example, personifications of Anger,
Death, Love,War and Peace all play their part in our visions of life.
Day
Night
ArcheDream’s costumes are illuminated with ultra-violet light, which
accentuates the supernatural aspect and reveals the dream scape as the
action unfolds."
THE GODDESS REMEMBERED is a beautifully crafted documentary directed by Donna Read and produced by the Canadian Film Board, an
in-depth look at Goddess religions in prehistory, the evolution of contemporary Goddess spirituality, and "The Burning Times", the witch-hunt hysteria that swept through Europe during the Inquisition. Goddess Remembered features Merlin Stone, Carol
Christ, Luisah Teish, Starhawk, Charlene Spretnak, and Jean Bolen, who
link the loss of goddess-centred societies with today's environmental
crisis. They propose a return to the belief in an interconnected life
system, with respect for the earth and the female, as fundamental to our
survival. Goddess Remembered is the first part of a three part series which includes The Burning Times and Full Circle. 1989.
This excerpt is from "The Burning Times", and talks about the massive torture
and burnings that were the ultimate in misogyny and sexual repression represented by the Catholic Church. If one wonders where the "war on women" going on in Congress right now comes from, here's one of the precedents. It is estimated that as many as 10 million people, all most all of them women, were murdered in this time, ironically, the same period when the Renaissance was flowering in Italy. As early as 1450, and before, witch hunts took place in Europe. In some villages virtually all the females, from grandmothers to small girls, were exteminated - an example is the village of Lagendorf, Germany, in 1492 (when America was being "discovered") all but two women were accused of witchcraft and destroyed. Just imagine that: an entire village with all of its mothers, daughters, grandmothers, and event female infants destroyed.
Ok, I can't help myself. I'm in a UTube kind of full moon mood.
There's a big difference between the intelligent existentialism of a cat like, say, Henri, and dogs. I'm a cat person, but I have to admit, this Jack Russell Terrier would come in handy.
Jesse has the life of a domestic slave. Henri, on the other hand, is considering running for office: