This doesn't really fit in a blog. And like many of my college papers, it was written at one sitting (I used a typewriter with white out and being able to re-write a paragraph was rare). Sometimes I do this and park it for months, and eventually publish a "robin masterpiece" like Monkeys Running the Environmental Zoo. Sometimes I do it in one sitting at a place like Motherboard.TV and an editor there helps me to produce "Why We Should Export Our Electronic 'Waste' To China and Africa.", which becomes subject of a documentary on European cable news.
I haven't reread this at all, so buyer beware. Here's my attempt at relational relativity applied to Marxism and development economics. It was too windy at the beach. (pun intended).
Cleaning Up in Capitalism: Relative Aspirational Pyramids
by Robin Ingenthron, July 21 2012. Written in Le Barcares, France.
In journalism, they say you need to know your audience. I'm obviously not a journalist, and don't think I'm competing in "free content" for the news writing community. But I think there are a lot of works I admire where the author (e.g. de Tocqueville) probably didn't exactly "know his (future) audience".
I'm also re-reading Herman Hesse's Siddhartha. In chapter one, he's an arrogantly admirable son of a brahmin (SOB).
I haven't reread this at all, so buyer beware. Here's my attempt at relational relativity applied to Marxism and development economics. It was too windy at the beach. (pun intended).
Cleaning Up in Capitalism: Relative Aspirational Pyramids
by Robin Ingenthron, July 21 2012. Written in Le Barcares, France.
In journalism, they say you need to know your audience. I'm obviously not a journalist, and don't think I'm competing in "free content" for the news writing community. But I think there are a lot of works I admire where the author (e.g. de Tocqueville) probably didn't exactly "know his (future) audience".
I'm also re-reading Herman Hesse's Siddhartha. In chapter one, he's an arrogantly admirable son of a brahmin (SOB).
The word Siddhartha is made up of two words in the Sanskrit language, siddha (achieved) + artha (meaning or wealth), which together means "he who has found meaning (of existence)" or "he who has attained his goals".[3]
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