Shopping for Blogs

Its Sunday and within a few weeks I shall be packing up the bicyclemark ranch and moving across town to the Old West. Where at high noon I’ll probably have to draw my six shooter against some Dutch outlaw. No wait.. wrong year, wrong region, wrong neighborhood. Old West is a lovely place where children run and play while future yuppies sip fine wine in small cafés.
But thats not the point today!

We all have our routines, whether its in offline life or online life. And Im sure you all have your favorite sites, feeds, message boards, etc. Myself Ive got around 150 feeds that I read almost daily. THAT is insane. Despite that fact, today I went blog shopping, to meet new bloggers and maybe find somethings to add to my routine. So let’s see, here come the links… I don’t have a solid review on each one yet.. Im still soaking them in. I can say that my theme in searching for them was people living outside their country or simply in interesting places, as far as Im concerned.

This one’s for food… Gluten Free, in fact.

This one’s from Taiwan, an ex American.

And this one from Bombay, just catches my attention, for lots of reasons.

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Information is Power. Along my guest today – Dave Brightbill from Radiomacguys.com, we discuss how the US government is trying to control and surpress access to broadband and wireless internet.

AudioCommunique #58(mp3)
30min, 64kbps, 14Mb+

Music by:

Lisboa Para Tras, Featuring Toka Collective
Lali Puna – Cooking the Books, from the B-sides and Remix album
Bright Eyes – Arc of Time, from Digital Ash…

Articles Related to this discussion:

Will Congress Ban Municipal Wi-Fi
Wiretapping on Internet-Based Telephoney Ruling
Broadband Rules Eased

Hypocracy and Radiation

Back in Amsterdam. Back to floating around the canals with good friends. And back to soaking in the world affairs and getting highly annoyed with events as they unfold.

I haven’t said much about the Iran nuclear issue, because I find it all so annoying and repetative. It starts to seem like every other day the UN makes a statement, the EU makes a statement, the Iranian gov. makes a statement. Repeat this process everyday for months. Of course, this is much better than, say, blowing each other up and killing people. So I’m not advocating some insane warmonger invasion.

But to put it quite simply, and I know these issues are never simple, I just think its silly for nations who have nuclear programs and who actively research new nuclear weapons (the US is working on Manhattan project II since before Clinton)…. its ironic for such nations to dictate to other nations if they can and can not research and build nuclear programs. Its makes very little sense to me, the whole concept that nations who currently have them are responsible, while nations who are trying to get nuclear technology are somehow NOT capable of handling them responsibly.

Now lets take another step back – I’m an avid anti-nuclear person. I hate the weapons, one of the worst mistakes in world history was developing them, and I despise the energy, which produces waste that is undisposable and lethal. But all that aside, looking at the world as-is, I can’t really get gung-go about this whole theory that Iran is somehow unfit to persue their nuclear program because Europe or the US, who did just that years ago, say they know what is best for these nations.

Até logo Lisboa

Last night was my last night in Lisbon. For this vacation anyway. Like so many nights when I did live there, I took myself to dinner, chose a little table in the corner at my favorite Indian restaurant, and ate very slowly while listening to the cornocopia of conversations going on in the room.

Lisbon is such a strange town for me, on so many levels. I’ve never fit in because I’m a Luso-American, born into a Portuguese family in New Jersey. Though I tried for years to act the part, saying good morning, good afternoon, and good evening to every old person in my neighborhood. I guess I hoped they’d start to see me as one of them. But they never did and now more then ever, they still don’t.

But one thing has changed. My desire to gain their approval. I stopped giving a shit and realized who I am as a Portuguese person, does not depend on their judgement. Beyond that, I’ve come to realize, regardless of the little money and property I actually own, class and education seperate me from these people. They look at me, they hear my accent, they observe my strangely polite mannerisms, and they decide that I’m somehow wealthy. Or maybe, I look at them and I realize that somehow I exist in some completely seperate privledged class.

Maybe its none of these. Rather- it goes back to my own insecurities. Whatever the cause, I still love the old neighborhood in Lisbon. Lots of things have changed of course, since my days working there. I do so miss the group of friends from those days, I miss the little restaurants and pubs that have since changed name and ownership. But still, there are things that never change in wonderous Lisbon, and people who I love that are still there. Those are the people and things I will forever come back to visit.

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Winding down in Portugal; Issues to discuss before I leave tomorrow.

AudioCommunique #57(mp3)
25min+, 64kbps, 12Mb+

I get into:

A great email from Vancouver gets me talking development and Portugal. Long-term versus short-term thinking in the US and here.
2600.com and a radio show that greatly influences me – Off the Hook.
Taxes in three countries, how I try to stay under the radar and Ill ultimately fail.
It starts pouring as I record.

Artists/Albums:

Humanos – Tribute to Antonio Variações
Lali Puna – B sides and Remixes
Maria Alice – Sol na Tchada
Jobim-Morelenbaum/Sakamoto – Casa

SubCommandante

SubCommandate MarcosWanna know why this blog is called the communique? I think I’ve never talked about it, much like I don’t spend much time explaining the bicycle part. But I just noticed a news item that inspired me to mention this.

For me, the name Communique, though quite common for lots of messages prepared for a mass audience, actually came from the Zapatista movement. In the late nineties I was studying journalism and politics and soaking in the news as it came out of Chiapas Mexico about the hooded indigineous rebels who sought to lead a bottom-up revolution. Later, my favorite book about it was First World HAHAHA. Here I read about the group and its activities to empower women and the disenfranchised. I also read that they released “communiqués” and when it came time to name the blog, that word came to mind.

So after leaving the public eye in 2000, and retreating back to their chiapas territory, the Subcommandante is back! And he’s touring the country, speaking about the corruption and hypocracy of the right and left in Mexico. And as you might expect – I’m glad to hear it!