U-M’s annual Prisoner Art Show opens tomorrow

For the next two weeks, in the University of Michigan’s North Campus Duderstadt Center Gallery, the folks from the Prison Creative Arts Project will be presenting their 15th annual exhibition of art by Michigan prisoners. This year’s collection includes over 400 pieces, pulled together from dozens of prisons scattered across the State. Having seen the last few exhibitions, I can highly recommend it to any of you in the audience who value art as a means of personal expression. [note: I’m told this year will be a bit different in that there will be a group of themed pieces dealing with the economy.]

For background on the project, and some insight into the controversy surrounding it, I’d recommend that you check out the interview I did a couple of years ago with curator Jason Wright, and the comments left afterward.

The show runs from March 23 – April 7. The gallery is open to the public from 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM, Tuesday – Saturday, and from 12:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Sunday & Monday. The exhibition is free, open to the public, and wheel chair accessible.

A selection of last year’s work, including the piece by Gary English, which you can see here, can be found at the online gallery Swipple.

gary-english_small

Posted in Art and Culture, Michigan | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Responding to spam

I rarely respond to spam, but there’s something about this letter that I received today that I find intriguing. Maybe it’s because it’s the first fake letter that I’ve received in a long that didn’t explicitly note either the function and size of my cock or an enormous amount of money being held in a foreign bank… At any rate, I’m thinking about responding, and I’m open to ideas as to how to play it. Should I, for instance, be a lonely strip club manager who dreams of going to culinary school, or a single father with tuberculosis? All ideas will considered.

Hello Dear,

I came here to look for my second half, my soul mate, my friend. It is
interesting to tell about myself to you, as I haven’t seen you ever before.
But I feel something inside. I feel like a little sign of hope that I am not
doing this in vain. I feel that you have the friendly soul to mine.
What I want to find is Love. Yes, Love from the big letter. Love demands
everything to present yourself, your soul to the other person. I want to
do this. I want to learn you better. If you want the same, I will be very
glad. I want to meet you and spend life with you together. I want to comfort
your heart with tenderness and care. Maybe our souls belong each other. If
you want to find that you, please write to me.

hugs,
LINDA

Posted in Mark's Life, Other | Tagged , , , , , , | 13 Comments

It looks like we have health care reform, what now?

Well, it looks like Obama has done what several Presidents since Harry Truman have tried to do and failed at, and passed comprehensive health care reform legislation. Actually, I don’t believe it’s passed yet, but, according to the New York Times, Obama has been able to line up 224 votes in the House, which is 8 more than he needs to pass the bill. So, when push came to shove, it looks as though reason won out over the lies and fear-mongering of Republicans. As someone who very much likes to see truth prevail, I couldn’t be happier.

As I’ve said in the past, it’s not a perfect bill, but it’s a lot better than what we have today. 32 million more Americans will be insured. Insurance companies won’t be able to deny coverage to individuals with preexisting conditions, and, just as importantly, they won’t be able to drop policy holders once they become ill. Here, for those of you who are interested, is a breakdown showing what specific changes we’ll see year by year, as the program rolls out. And, here are details on how the new law will impact businesses.

One wonders what’s going to happen once the criminally misinformed masses on the right realize that, contrary to what they’ve been told, there aren’t government “death panels” handing down edicts on who lives and who dies. I said it a long time ago, but I really think that Republicans are going to rue the day that they stuck the “Obamacare” monicker on this. Once people start seeing the benefits of the legislation, I think there’s going to be a monumental, positive shift in public opinion. Of course, it may not come fast enough to help save Democratic seats in the upcoming midterm election. Sometimes, though, that’s the price you pay for standing up for what you believe in and doing the right thing.

photo-tea-bagger-signRepublican David Frum thinks that this is the Republican’s Waterloo – the worst setback the party has seen since the 1960s. And I can only hope that he’s right. Not only do I hope that the party violently implodes, but I hope the damage is done from within, by the rightwing fringe element we’ve come to know as the Teabaggers – those individuals, cultivated by the right, who stood outside the Capitol today, calling our elected officials who want to insure them “faggots” and “niggers,” and chanting things like, “Kill the bill, and then the nigger,” referring, I’m assuming, to our President. (More disgusting yet is the fact that Republican leaders are excusing this behavior.)

So, where are we now, and what have we learned?

Personally, I love the irony. This bill is very much a conservative bill. As Frum notes, it has a lot in common with Mitt Romney’s Massachusetts plan. And it mandates that people buy insurance through private insurers. What could be more pro-business than that? But, Republicans, instead of sharing credit for the plan, and working with the administration, chose to gamble everything on an Obama failure. They chose to put politics ahead of their constituents, and it looks as though they failed on all counts. Not only did Obama beat them, but he’ll increasingly be credited for their contributions. And, they’ll go down in history as the party of “no,” that fought him at every step, and offered nothing but lies and hostility.

But the fight on health care isn’t over yet. There’s still a chance that the public option could be introduced as an amendment, and Congressman Alan Grayson has drafted legislation to do just that. So, let’s keep this momentum going tonight, and help him keep the public option alive.

And then let’s get some of that Wall Street bonus money back, and put a few folks in jail.

Posted in Health, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments closed

Ypsi Cycle-Powered Cinema update, volunteer meeting April 1

On Thursday, April 1 we’ll be meeting at the Corner Brewery in Ypsi at 6:00 PM to discuss the future of the Cycle Powered Cinema project. If you think you might be interested, please come out, have a beer, and meet the rest of the team. And feel free to encourage anyone else you know who might have an interest in bringing free, off-grid, people-powered movies to Ypsi’s Riverside Park to come out and join us.

Right now, it’s mostly money that’s holding us back. So far, we’ve taken in $193.10 (and one weird Canadian coin) in donations. We have, however, spent quite a bit more than that, having bought motors, generators, DC-AC converters and the like. At the moment, we’re probably about $500 in the hole, but we don’t intend to stop. We’re committed to find a way to make this work.

The next step is to have a real test of the concept, with a few bikes. We could either do this indoors, at the Brewery, or outside, behind the new VG Kids world headquarters, on the banks of the Huron River. The idea would be to have two bikes, equipped with generators, feeding into a deep-cycle marine battery. People, under this scenario, would begin peddling several hours prior to the movie(s) being shown, in order to store up the power necessary to project the film. In order to pull this off, in addition to what we already have, we would need the following:

One more bike stand and generator, at a cost of $399.

A 25 amp fuse and holder, at a cost of about $5.

A Blocking Rectifier Diode, at a cost of $49.

A 12 vdc Regulator/Converter, at a cost of $235.

Another DC to AC Inverter, at a cost of $100.39.

TOTAL: $788.39

pedalbest.JPGWe would need five more generators to pull off a big show, where people are peddling to power a film in real-time, but this would take care of most of the infrastructure that we’d need.

[These numbers are based on a few assumptions: 1) that we can find at least two bikes, 2) that we can borrow a digital projector, 3) that we can borrow deep-cycle marine battery.]

We recently submitted a grant proposal to the Ann Arbor Arts Alliance. If it comes though, this beta test could take place as early as April. If not, though, we’re going to have to initiate fundraising activities. It’s something that we can discuss at the meeting, but I’m thinking that we could ask local businesses to contribute $150 or $200 a piece toward the project, which we’re convinced would, when up and running, draw several hundred people downtown (which would be good for their businesses). There are also plans afoot to add a “donate” button to our Cycle Powered Cinema website, so that individuals can contribute online, but it’s probably still a few weeks away.

I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank Donald Harrison and the folks at the Ann Arbor Film Festival, who have been incredibly supportive of this project to the point of allowing us to present the idea at next week’s festival, where our friend Michael Flynn, a professional builder of science museum exhibits, will be debuting his own bike-powered projector under the Cycle Powered Cinema banner… If you’re in Ann Arbor next week, be sure to check it out.

For those of you not familiar with the Cycle Powered Cinema initiative, you can find background information here and video of our first test run here.

[note: That’s an image of Michael’s Ann Arbor Film Festival exhibit accompanying this post.]

Posted in Alternative Energy, Art and Culture, cycle powered cinema, Education, energy, Environment, Global Warming, Other, Special Projects, Ypsilanti | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Obama, finally, gets passionate on health care

Now that we’re in the final push for health care reform, we’re finally starting to see Obama show some spunk. It’s taken over a year to get there, but we’re finally getting a glimpse of the guy we elected. One can only hope that Sunday’s vote is successful, and that he continues in the same way to address financial reform and the economy.

And I’m generally not a big fan of online signature campaigns, but, assuming you’re already contacted your representatives in D.C., please consider signing MoveOn’s emergency petition on health care. This whole thing is going to be decided in less than 24 hours, and we still need votes in the House. We can’t afford to just sit by today and let the lobbyists in D.C. decide what American health care should look like. If this legislation passes, 32 million more americans will have health insurance, and insurance companies will no longer be able to drop you once you become ill, or keep you from being insured because of a preexisting condition. This bill is by no means perfect, but it’s a step forward for American families, and we absolutely have to pass it. So, if you haven’t written to your Congressperson yet, please follow that link above and let them know how you feel right now. And, if you have written to your member of Congress, please take a moment and sign this petition. We’re within reach of making history tomorrow, and we can’t afford not to give it everything we’ve got.

Posted in Health, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

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