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Episode 16: Book Recommendations, Part 1. January 9, 2019House cleaning and announcements: Black and Green Podcast is now Primal Anarchy Podcast, Black and Green Review is now Wild Resistance. New book announcement, Cull of Personality: Ayahuasca, Colonialism and the Death of a Healer, e-book out now, print books in hand later this month. Thoughts on primal anarchy vs anarcho-primitivism. Get pissed about what is happening to the Unist’ot’en. Madhusree Mukerjee on the Sentinelese killing missionary John Chau. Book recommendations, part 1: your anti-civ library. You’re welcome nerds. - A Nerd.
Had the pleasure of swinging by Eugene, Oregon to meet up at John Zerzan's house last weekend along with five other current and former editors of Black and Green Review to talk about the journal, direction, discussion about the anarchist milieu and anti-civ discussion. Featuring John Zerzan, Evan Cestari, Lilia, Cliff Hayes, and Yank.
A reading of Kevin Tucker's essay 'Feral Revisions' from Black and Green Review no 5.
Black and Green Review 6 timeline. Anniversaries of Charlottesville and execution of Mike Brown in the unending tension of social media and civilization. Poem break: Joan Kovatch's 'Timing'. Of Gods and Country, update, overview and reading. Murder of native women and the legacies and institutions of colonization. Intergenerational trauma and domestication. Why hunter-gatherers matter.
Some podcast housecleaning, now available on the Channel Zero Anarchist Podcast Network, upcoming Goodlife Revival interview and Gathered Remains promo. Info on submitting work for Black and Green Review no 6. Monsanto's insane 'Climate Fieldview' "social network": automation and automatons for a dismal future. Discussion on Barbara Ehrenreich's excellent new book Natural Causes. On growing up a Zionist and writing a book about Christian missionaries, but not overlooking the colonization of Israel. Readings from Fredy Perlman.
Introductory episode. Going over some ideas about the podcast and format, going over Kevin Tucker's incoming new book, Gathered Remains. Walk through of the new issue of Black and Green Review (no 5). Some discussion about upcoming B&G projects and publications.
“Thank you Mr. Machine...or Ms. Machine?” —John Zerzan About: What does one make of our future—like the one 50 years from now? The answer, or rather a possible answer, has a lot to do with choice and technology. Whether we survive or go extinct is, however, another question. Show Notes: [01:20] A link to download the Park Mobile app [01:25] “Inamorata (Marimba Solo)” by Blue Dot Sessions [04:40] “Inside the Tower” by Visager [06:15] More on Clooneys Pub (SFGate) [06:40] Light reading on the James Comey hearings (CNN) [07:50] More on Peter Eckersley (Electronic Frontier Foundation) [08:20] Light reading on the latest allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US Election (The New York Times) [09:40] “When in the West” by Blue Dot Sessions [09:45] Light reading on: The abacus (Ryerson University) The astrolabe (Smithsonian Magazine) The sundial (How Stuff Works) The analytical engine (ThoughtCo) And a worthwhile video on Charles Babbage And this Crash Course series on the history of computing is worth the watch [10:35] Related: How much Internet v.1 cost (Larry Press) [10:20] Newsreel from 1964 track meet between the US and USSR [10:35] Some worthwhile videos on how the Internet started: In animation form In SciShow series form with Part I, II and III And in a super-short condensed form [10:45] “Timesharing: A Solution to Computer Bottlenecks” (Computer History Museum) [11:25] Light reading on ARPANET (Live Science) Related: Original sketch of ARPANET (SRI International) Related: Room where the first message was sent (Gizmodo) Related: The growth of the Internet over the years (Vox) Related: An overview of the Internet (WebpageFX) Related: A list of Internet firsts Related: What happens every second on the Internet [11:55] “Gregorian Chant” by Kevin MacLeod [12:25] “Inside the Tower” by Visager [12:55] Some background on: TCP/IP Protocols and the individual behind it (WIRED) Advanced packet switching (Editor’s note: you should watch this) Email (Nethistory.com) Related: How the Internet was viewed in 1969 and in 1981 [13:10] Light reading on the World Wide Web And on Tim Berners-Lee Related: Why it’s called surfing the web [13:30] What it was like being online in the 80s (Gizmodo) [13:50] Light reading on AOL (Fast Company) ...and Compuserve (Ars Technica) Animation illustrating “the series of tubes” Sound of a 56K dial up modem (10Stripe.com) [14:00] Light reading on the Eternal September (Wikipedia) Related: A guide on the Internet before it took off (TIME) [14:10] The man behind the “You Got Mail” audio (Great Big Story) [14:15] Light reading on the early browser days of Erwise, Mosaic and Netscape (Ars Technica) [14:25] Commercialization begins (New York Times) Sort of related: Vice President Al Gore logs onto the Internet (CSPAN) Also sort of related: Al Gore’s relationship with the Internet (Gizmodo) [14:25] “Astrisx” by Blue Dot Sessions [14:35] A montage of Pets.com commercials—and a brilliant overview on the dotcom bubble (WIRED) [14:45] Is there a 2010s Tech Bubble? (in no particular order) Bloomberg Vanity Fair The Telegraph Business Insider Inc Forbes [15:15] More on the more modern history of the Internet and related services [15:30] More on Aral Balkan (@aral) And on his mission for an independent Internet (Paste) [16:30] See the Ethical Design Manifesto here [18:00] Some short videos on how online advertising works: The evolution of online display advertising (IABUK) The life of a programmatic ad (Media Crossing) Background on real-time bidding (Acuity Ads) ...and one more pivot to video—the history of ads (Mashable) [20:10] More on Kevin Kelly (@Kevin2Kelly) Bio Author of What Technology Wants The Inevitable Read his writing here (WIRED) Hear about his trip around the world (This American Life — First Act of the show) Read his “Network Nation” report here Light reading on the Whole Earth Catalog (Rolling Stone) And the WELL And his book Out of Control, which was a required reading for actors on The Matrix [22:50] “Cyclotrak” by Blue Dot Sessions [23:20] More on the Technium [25:45] “Drone Birch” by Blue Dot Sessions [27:30] See related study on early human brain vs. later human brain (Smithsonian Magazine) [27:40] Light reading on John Zerzan (The Guardian) [27:50] Light reading on the Unabomber (The Atlantic) [28:05] Kaczynski's Manifesto and its reviews [28:45] A 60 Minutes report on the Battle for Seattle (CBS News) [29:00] “Tralaga” by Blue Dot Sessions [29:40] Zerzan’s book—Elements of Refusal [29:45] More on Anarchy Radio [29:55] And a link to the Black and Green Review [32:50] Maker Faire 2017 (San Jose Mercury News) [33:40] See the tesla coil here [34:20] See Randy Gallegos’ paintings here [35:35] “Epilogue” by Visager [36:00] More on Jason Malcolm Stewart (@sabbathsoldier) [38:55] More on Ronald Moore (@rondmoore) See related Portlandia skit [40:00] Related: See Ray Kurzweil on the three technologies that will shape our future [40:30] More on Alex Schultink Related: Dr. Jennifer Doudna (New York Times) Related: Radiolab episode on CRISPR [43:40] More on Dr. Heather Berlin (@heather_berlin) An interview where Berlin discusses what happens to your brain on creativity (Studio 360) [47:40] Meet Pepper Inside Pepper (Nikkei Asian Review) [48:55] Light reading on Softbank (Wikipedia) [50:30] “How Realistic Is Westworld?” (Vulture) [50:55] Light reading on technological singularity (The Guardian) The concerns over AI (The Hive) Open letter on artificial intelligence [51:05] Stephen Hawking on AI (BBC) [52:30] Kevin Kelly’s full takedown of the singularity (WIRED) [53:05] Kelly’s $1,000 bet with Kirk Sale (Wired) [57:05] “A Simple Blur” by Blue Dot Sessions [58:00] Light reading on the state of mental illness in the States (Salon) Related: Study finds more Americans suffering from stress, anxiety and depress (CBS News) [01:02:50] Recommended Podcast to Listen to Until the Next Show: Terrible, Thanks For Asking More at thisissomenoise.com/ep-19