Nmherman on Sat, 19 May 2001 23:12:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: totalitarianism in cyberspace? |
In a message dated 5/19/2001 3:07:46 PM Central Daylight Time, PGalaxy@compuserve.com writes: > Dont get me going Max, don't get me going. > I am desperate to stay constructive, while my blood is boiling over > Need to chill. I hear you loud and clear. I sometimes get so upset about the Supreme Court I can hear the oil wells chewing up Alaska and every decent human in history screaming at me to do something. It's hard to chill sometimes, I struggle with that too. I think the system of control and degradation of genius uses frustration as its primary weapon, like in Orwell where the prisoner has to say "2+2=5." Genius 2000 helps me to chill but I don't always use it. Genius 2000 has already accomplished a lot, so that calms me. I know we're going to be effective, and I really respect the people who have contributed to it so far. It's hard not to feel like cult followers at first. Most people are skeptical of me and my ideas and that's healthy, but I certainly take comfort from the people who say "I see what you're saying, you're not fascist, you have a quick and humane intellect." I also need very much to write a book. For example, most people don't know the grounding that Genius 2000 has in ancient literature for example. I'm also considered sort of unfriendly so people don't discuss my work very much and this makes it taboo and hence unnecessarily mysterious. I am going to work on the book this summer. I don't have any funding however so I have to work a regular job, but that feels good too. Genius 2000 is also relevant to a book called "Zen and the Brain" by James Austin. I would recommend it if you want to know some of the neuroscience behind Genius 2000. It's not blind faith and fervor by any stretch; frankly Genius 2000 is common sense but it looks outrageous because our society has gotten so fucked up. > > >Here in Minneapolis I am starting a whole new network of democratic genius. > > >It's a joke mostly, just something to do, but it's very good and makes a > lot > >of wonderful sense. The scene here is thirsting for something original > since > >we lost Husker Du. All the presses are gearing up to protest George Bush. > > > yes I agree, must be devoted to the self and cultivate what is sane and > likely to grow, thanks for reminding me that perhaps the fastest way to > change > the systems - the institutions - is by working on individuals. > > That said, we still need to do something about the media. > I think to establish a committee for the supervision of bulsshit in the > media > is the minimum global society could do. I think also if we make a good > job about internet information (producing it and spreading it) > we are likely to change the media too. I work with Indymedia here in Minnesota and they are good, especially at exposing the corporate/governmental elites. I support them but I also have my own, separate work that deals with the question of artistic or intellectual genius and the hierarchical systems we still have left with from the earliest civilizations. Hierarchy, control, and production for sale are still the main concepts we use to organize genius (which I use to describe cognitive, expressive, and perceptual faculties ALL humans possess--not just the Einsteins and Picassos or Newtons.) The hierarchical system still controls the world of art and literature, as well as entertainment, education, academics, and politics. Its control however gets weaker and more desperate all the time--think how desperate Bush is right now, probably more than you or me--and it won't take much to inform the general populace. This will make voting, among other things, effectual and beneficial again. The downside is that those of us who want to be artists, writers, and leaders must accept a diminished and more distributed authority. The old guard says this is mere laziness and lack of talent but I disagree. In the future, people will just be great and historic in different ways, according to different standards than in the past. Lots of established people today don't want to give up that authority--their role as selected, paid, admired geniuses--and so they fight me. One risk of the internet is that it will only be used as it is now used by the large media corporations. It's important to be independent as well as to work with others. That's why I have my own Network, so I don't get absorbed by say NBC, as I surely would if I chose to work with them. > > I am learning to discover and trust my own genius, its brilliant, its > powerful its all over > and it leads my life which is great fun. Perhaps you'd like to write > something for us > to post about it...just checked out your website the link to the god project > is broken but > it makes me most curious, what is it - found the link to Noam though, that > will do for now <g> I could definitely write something but I would need to know what style etc., so please send me your site address. "The God Project" was by Eryk Salvaggio--similar in some ways to Genius 2000 and thankfully proving I am not some kind of supergenius who gets ideas no one else can--and consisted of the results he found searching for "God" on major search engines. His current site is www.one38.org but I think he may have lost the God Project when his computer got a virus. It's funny how I end up getting into aesthetic or expressive ideas when I think about Chomsky and his ideas about propaganda and corporate media control. I think this is because experiencing one's own genius is very rare and unique and often frowned upon--we are expected to let the professional artists and thinkers fulfill genius for us and then buy their works. But I agree, using your own genius is the best thing in the world; the second best thing is being able to do it within a community of people who are also doing it. Or maybe vice versa, who knows. Optimism is very good to have, but so is fierceness. Genius will change the world once we start letting it happen, so as one of the speakers in my video says, "--and imperfections. Don't expect everything to be in its place. And then take that little extra step." That's a reassuring and emboldening kind of thinking, for me. Max Herman The Genius 2000 Network http://www.geocities.com/kempfhut.JPG > > > pdm _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold