à bas le ciel
Sunday, 15 December 2024
Thursday, 12 December 2024
Veganism as a Civilizing Mission: a new moral definition for an ancient, aging movement.
The end of the era of utilitarianism and its implications.
LINK: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6m4WYF5znyULE4HwrMqcVo?si=0XtLriqFR5u9VYXKXuP-KA
On the Idiocy of Extinction Rebellion ~or~ Roger Hallam is in Jail for a Reason.
I'm amazed that this is less than one hour long. Action packed.
LINK: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6mQlnozY8EwhysGjXBnGQs?si=baf66a1fd8ff4382
• This is Terrorism: the Nonviolence of Extinction Rebellion. 28 October 2021
• The Vegan Antichrist: Questioning Extinction Rebellion. 18 January 2022
• Peaceful Protest Doesn't Work. #NotSatire 19 November 2021
• Climate change: the vegan perspective is the only perspective. 24 January 2022
Saturday, 7 December 2024
Elagabalus and the Religion of Rome: Emperor, Empress, Priest and Priestess.
Episode 02 of Doomed Republic: a podcast about ancient ideals, modern utopias, dystopias and attempts at democracy, including Greece, Rome China, India, Europe and America. (AR+IO-005)
LINK: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1C5ZwBqaTEd150XGBefnPs?si=YmYb9Cj-T0KOeqbuRWEmkQ
Elagabalus is now celebrated as "the first transgender emperor of Rome", raising questions of the limits of tolerance in the Ancient Greco-Roman world: did he cross some line that Nero never crossed? And was that line sexual, religious or political? Why is it that Elagabalus would be remembered as the lowest of the low by Roman historians who had already narrated the excesses (gay, straight and bisexual) of Nero and so many others? Why would Elagabalus have his name scraped off of monuments at the command of the senate after his death, while others who'd committed worse offenses would undergo apotheosis, and instead be referred to as gods?
Friday, 6 December 2024
Tuesday, 26 November 2024
The Critique of DXE: a Decade of Vegan Opposition to "Direct Action Everywhere."
One of the most despised (but most influential) movements in veganism's 21st century, DXE was known for public protest "stunts" that earned them momentary notice in newspapers but permanently discredited the movement as a whole. Initially claiming to be "fully horizontal" and "leaderless", the organization later revealed just how narrowly hierarchical it was as the donations poured in, eventually surpassing a budget of one million dollars per year, and sex scandals (amidst rumors of cult-like conditions at their live-in compound) were responded to with bureaucratic red tape. DXE was founded by Wayne Hsiung, with significant leadership roles played by his sister and two of his ex-girlfriends (Priya Sawhney and Cassie King) who continued to control the money after Wayne resigned, ran for mayor, and dealt with the details of world's most boring (and insincerely exaggerated) sex scandal. More than any other organization, DxE has associated vegans with screaming and weeping at random customers on the floor of fast food restaurants, and getting yourself banned from the local grocery store, with their dubious methodology of "disruption" justified by even more dubious "social science research". Despite big budgets, celebrity endorsements, and court cases with (brief) prison sentences keeping their name in the news, the organization has slid into obscurity in recent years —but the damage done to veganism as a movement (and to the lives of hundreds of individual vegans who were foolish enough to join their "network") still endures.