POPULARITY
உலகின் எல்லா நாடுகளிலும் அரசதிகாரம் உருவான போது அதனை நியாயப்படுத்தும் சித்தாந்தங்களும் உருவாகும்.இதுவே உலக வரலாறு காட்டும் உண்மையாகும். அரசதிகாரம் மக்களை ஒடுக்கிய காலங்களில் அதனை நியாயப்படுத்தும் சாத்திரங்களும் எழுதப்படும். பெரும்பாலான மக்கள் எழுத்தறிவற்றவர்களாக வாழும் காலங்களில் எழுதப்பட்ட சாத்திரங்கள் அவர்களது சிந்தனைத் திறனை அடிஐப்படுத்தி தாங்கள் அடிமை என்று தங்காளையே ஏற்கச் செய்யும் இந்திய துணைக்கண்டத்தில் அவ்வாறு உருவான சித்தாந்தத்தைத் தான் நாம் பார்ப்பனியம் என்று அழைக்கிறோம். பார்ப்பனியம் என்பது ஒரு கருத்தியல் வன்முறை ஆகும். பிறப்பின் வழியாகவே ஏனைய மக்கள் திறள்களை இழிந்தவர்கள் என்று அது அடையாளம் காட்டுவதையே நாம் வன்முறை என்கிறோம். .. .. .... .. .. தங்களுக்கு மட்டுமே உரிய வடமொழி, வேதம் ஆகியன அறிவார்ந்த விவாதங்களுக்கு அப்பாற்பட்டன என்பதும் வட்டார மொழிகளை நிராகரித்து சமஸ்கிருதத்தை மட்டுமே உயர்த்திப் பிடிப்பதும் கோயில்களின் தலைமையும், மற்ற சாதியாரின் சடங்கியல் தலைமையும் தங்களுக்கேயுரியன எனச் சாதிப்பதும் பார்ப்பனியத்தின் வேஷங்கள் ஆகும். .. .. .... .. .. ஒரு சனநாயக நாட்டில் மொழிச் சமத்துவமும் பிறப்புச் சமத்துவமும் ஏற்படாதவரை முழுமையான சமத்துவம் மலர இயலாது. பார்ப்பனிய எதிர்ப்பு என்பது மனித சமத்துவத்துக்கும் சனநாயகத்துக்குமான தேடலாகும். .. .. .. Tho. Paramasivan (Tamil: தொ. பரமசிவன்; 1950 – 24 December 2020), often known as Tho Pa, was an Indian Tamil anthropologist, writer, folklorist, archeologist and professor. He was the first graduate in his family. He grew up to serve as a professor of Tamil at Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, simultaneously pursuing a writer's career.
This week in the Cold, we go demonic and talk about all manner of community lore, but especially about the real events that inspired the classic novel and 1973 film, "The Exorcist." This is a deep dive into how non-fiction becomes lore, which turns into fiction that spreads like wildfire! This episode is also available as a blog post: https://victoriadougherty.wordpress.com/2023/02/24/go-to-st-louis/ And speaking of fiction, here's some of mine: Amazon.com: Victoria Dougherty: books, biography, latest update --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/victoria-dougherty/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/victoria-dougherty/support
This week in the Cold, we go demonic and talk about all manner of community lore, but especially about the real events that inspired the classic novel and 1973 film, "The Exorcist." This is a deep dive into how non-fiction becomes lore, which turns into fiction that spreads like wildfire! This episode is also available as a blog post: https://victoriadougherty.wordpress.com/2023/02/24/go-to-st-louis/ And speaking of fiction, here's some of mine: Amazon.com: Victoria Dougherty: books, biography, latest update --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/victoria-dougherty/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/victoria-dougherty/support
Parochialism, the call to holiness, and “ecce agnus dei.” Father David Boettner delivers the homily at the 9 a.m. Mass at the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Knoxville, Tenn.
On this occasion I chat with Chef Dennis over food, its omnipresence among all cultures due to the shared biology of the human condition, how the obesity epidemic could be ameliorated returning to the diet of our grandparents, the importance of taking into account personal differences when looking for the optimal diet, the unfortunate fact that the cheapest food that we can consume are junk foods, making eating healthily a difficult task in north america, the cultural and culinary differences in the west between North American and European countries among which both of our opinions converge in that the latter has the best food. Find Chef Dennis at askchefdennis.com Also on Instagram at @askchefdennis On Facebook at @askchefdennis On Pinterest at @askchefdennis
Click here for the article.If you are enjoying Condensed Matter, please consider supporting the show on Patreon. In recognition of your support, you'll get the opportunity to suggest articles and guests for future episodes. You can carry on the discussion on Twitter and there's even an Instagram page. Thanks for listening! Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/CondensedMatter)
The Net Assessment team debates Patrick Porter and Michael Mazarr's recent study on "Countering China's Adventurism Over Taiwan: A Third Way" written for the Lowy Institute. Chris, Melanie, and Zack agree that the study is thought provoking and well argued, but disagree about whether it is ultimately convincing. Nonetheless, Porter and Mazarr have made a real contribution by helping to clarify the assumptions that underlie different approaches to the Taiwan. Chris gives a shout out to the Bridging the Gap effort, Melanie complains about John Cena and Bing, and Zack commends his former colleague Ari Tabatabai. Links Patrick Porter and Michael Mazarr, "Countering China's Adventurism Over Taiwan: A Third Way," Lowy Institute, May 20, 2021 Irene Braam and Alexandra de Hoop Scheffer, "Transatlantic Trends 2021," German Marshall Fund of the United States and Bertelsmann Foundation, June 2021 Oriana Skylar Mastro, "The Taiwan Temptation," Foreign Affairs, July/August 2021 Charles L. Glaser, "Washington Is Avoiding the Tough Questions on Taiwan and China," Foreign Affairs, April 28, 2021 Ariane M. Tabatabai, No Conquest, No Defeat: Iran's National Security Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2020), Dustin Walker, "Congress Should Rewrite the Pentagon's Pacific Deterrence Budget Request," Defense News, June 2, 2021 Joe Biden, “My Trip to Europe Is about America Rallying the World's Democracies,” The Washington Post, June 5, 2021 Martin Pengelly, “Biden Trumpets Democracy in Post Op-ed – As Threats Spread at Home,” The Guardian, June 6, 2021 Bridging the Gap “Future Foreign Policy: Global Perceptions of the United States, Featuring Caroline Gray,” June 16, 2021, Noon EDT Tom Karako, “Sing, Missile Muse, of Gods and Heroes: America's Most Fearsome Weapons Need Better Names,” War on the Rocks, June 7, 2021 Jill Disis, “‘F9' Star John Cena Says He Loves China After Taiwan Remark Stokes Anger,” CNN, May 25, 2021 Elizabeth Braw, “Spying on Allies is Normal. Also Smart,” Politico EU, June 4, 2021. Syaru Shirley Lin, “It's Not Just China: Population, Power Generation, Political Polarization, and Parochialism are Also Long-Term Threats to Taiwan's Success and Survival,” PRC Leader, June 1, 2021 “China's Growing Military Confidence Puts Taiwan at Risk,” Economist, May 1, 2021 Blake Herzinger, “US Ditching Taiwan Commitments is a Dead-End Idea,” Foreign Policy, May 3, 2021 Paul Mozur, “Microsoft's Bing Briefly Blocked ‘Tank Man' on Anniversary of Tiananmen Anniversary,” New York Times, June 5, 2021
The East Side Freedom Library invites you a special version of our Labor History Film and Reading Group for March 2021. The Uprising of ‘34, the award-winning documentary by George Stoney, is the subject of a conversation on March 16, via Zoom, with the film's editor Susanne Rostock and labor historian Mary Wingerd, author of the essay Rethinking Paternalism: Power and Parochialism in a Southern Mill Village (Journal of American History, 1996). The film is available for rental on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/ondemand/uprisingof34. For Women's History Month, join ESFL in an exploration of the lives, work, and struggles of southern textile mill workers. The Uprising of '34 is a startling documentary which tells the story of the General Strike of 1934, a massive but little-known strike by hundreds of thousands of Southern cotton mill workers during the Great Depression. The mill workers' defiant stance — and the remarkable grassroots organizing that led up to it — challenged a system of mill owner control that had shaped life in cotton mill communities for decades. Mary Wingerd's essay not only explores this system of control, but also unearths the under-the-radar forms of resistance which made this strike possible. And she encourages us to consider other times and places where such control and resistance informed working class life. The Uprising of '34 offers a penetrating look at class, race, and power in working communities throughout America and raises critical questions about the role of history in making democracy work today. More than a social document, the film is intended to spark discussion on class, race, economics, and power — issues as vital today as they were decades ago. “The thrust of this film is to give the workers their chance to speak,” said editor Rostock. “We're very proud of the fact that here's a film in which they speak for themselves [with no narrator].” Our conversation will feature Susanne Rostock the film's editor and Minnesota historian Mary Wingerd. Rostock is a director as well as an editor, perhaps best known for her presentation of Harry Belafonte's life in Sing Your Song (2011). In an HBO project, she is currently directing Another Night in the Free World which documents the lives of three young women activists from 2012 to the present. Wingerd is the author of Claiming the City: Politics, Faith, and the Power of Place in St. Paul (2001) and North Country: The Making of Minnesota (2010). Please join us. View the video here: https://youtu.be/1Qg3FmtSX-w
In this episode, Nathanael Cooper and national affairs editor Rob Harris explore the parochialism that has reared its head during the pandemic and what it means for us as a nation. Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Nathanael Cooper and national affairs editor Rob Harris explore the parochialism that has reared its head during the pandemic and what it means for us as a nation. Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In our current educational system, standardized tests are used to assess the quality of the student-products as they move along the 13-year conveyor belt within the education factories commonly referred to as schools. Students who have test scores that fall below a certain percentile ranking are thought to have a disability. Additional standardized tests are then given by standardized testing experts to confirm and diagnose the cause of the disability. Very much like a disease, a “special” standardized treatment is then prescribed for this disability.These students are then sent off to Special Ed World. This is a purgatorial “special” place apart from the general education classroom where students are given the prescribed special treatment by special treatment experts. In the segregated setting of Special Ed World, the special treatment experts implement the special treatment with fidelity. However, one of the many problems with Special Ed World as currently configured is that once students become entangled in the special education machinery, they are lost forever. They rarely return.This podcast examines four interconnecting elements within Special Ed World: (a) reading instruction, (b) data-resistant theoretical constructs, (c) paradigmatic parochialism regarding what is considered “scientifically-based” research, and (d) manipulative approaches to teaching.
Culture is upstream from performance.Behind a sometimes playful, sometimes serious, argument about what rank structure the new Space Force should use is the very serious matter of culture.Culture for any organization is the foundation future success or failure, and is a based on words, and titles. These mean things – especially when they are related to the actual work you do.Using their recent article, Parochialism, not Congress or naval history, will kill the Space Force, returning Midrats alumni Matt Hipple and Jack McCain will be with us for the full hour in a broad ranging discussion on building the right foundation and culture for Space Force … and maybe a few minutes about the upcoming Dune remake too.
Two Progressives Get Real About Pandemics, Pandering, Parentage, Parochialism, and Patronage. Another irreverent and lively discussion between Cee and professional comedian Matt S. Thoughts & Players interviews, screenwriters, photographers, directors, videographers, creative writers, musicians, singers, dancers, actors, performers, comedians, artists, entertainers, and other creators. A C3 Studios production. WATCH C3 Studio's podcast video now: https://youtu.be/RsIoL371ILk ► Subscribe to C3: https://bit.ly/2k2HeZf Follow C3 on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheC3Studios Like C3 on FaceBook: https://facebook.com/StudiosByC3 For even more news, stay tuned to: Tumblr: https://thec3studios.tumblr.com/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/thec3studio/ Google+: https://bit.ly/2ItYlxU Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/thec3studios/
This Week in the Middle East with William Morris of the Next Century Foundation
Antisemitism and Islamophobia seem to be everywhere, along with a new Spirit of Parochialism. But why, and whose fault is it? (the picture used with this podcast shows the Dachau Memorial)Support the show (https://www.justgiving.com/tncf)
This Week in the Middle East with William Morris of the Next Century Foundation
We are moving into a new era of British politics exemplified by moves to remove the British Second Chamber, the House of Lords, to the provincial town of York. Aspects of this new regionalism are encouraging. But is the motivation a move towards a smaller and more parochial and less inclusive world? And is this a symptom of a wider worldwide malaise?Support the show (https://www.justgiving.com/tncf)
International rugby players, led by Johnny Sexton, Kieran Read and Owen Farrell, released a scathing attack on World Rugby's proposed new international competition. Murray, Gavan and this week's guest Bernard Jackman take a look at the competition and their grievances. Also featured this week: - Jack McGrath's potential move to Ulster - Provincial loyalty - Captaincy styles - Sports psychologists - Connacht legend John Muldoon Apologies for slight interference on the John Muldoon interview from roughly 54.30 - 59.00. The42 Rugby Weekly is brought to you by Volkswagen, a proud sponsor of Irish rugby. If you enjoy it, please subscribe to - and rate - the show, and feel free to send your questions and thoughts to sport@the42.ie.
A NEW mind, a new installation of software. It’s not about hell as a geographical location but rather as hell as a state of consciousness. Hell in the head caused by becoming unaware of useless and repetitive thoughts which create mental suffering. Unaware of being unaware. Deer in the headlights. Stuck in its own way. Parochialism. One trick pony. Attachments to illusion. iE, “Once I go on vacation, I’ll be happy.” The as soon as syndrome. Change the seer, not the circumstances. The only way out is in. The traffic jam isn’t your problem. The sheer bliss of the present moment is the solution. Wondering why you must wait is your problem because you keep questioning what the joy of waiting produces. A jar of muddy water will clear up as the dirty debris naturally and effortlessly sinks to the bottom. Waiting for clarity is all that is needed. It’s not toilsome, difficult or disturbing. The clarity is worth the waiting as the waiting is how inner peace and joy results from understanding temporary mud in water is not the water. How to be is vastly more crucial than what to be. The being doesn’t diminish in value by being the being regardless of what it is doing. Get the being right and the doing takes care of itself.
July 1 has come and gone and no one legally bought marijuana in Massachusetts. Plenty of people bought illegal marijuana and legally smoked it, sort of a "don't ask/don't tell" situation. But the date viewed by many as a launch for retail recreational sales is now looking like the end of the summer, almost two years after voters approved a statewide referendum legalizing adult use. James Smith, a former state representative who championed legal weed back in the 1970s and now is an attorney representing the nascent industry, says the cause of the delay lays squarely with cities and towns who are dragging their feet on zoning and host agreements if they haven't enacted bans and moratoriums. "Parochialism, puritanicalism," said Smith, who, along with Jennifer Flanagan of the state Cannabis Control Commission joined The Codcast to talk about the slow rollout of the law. "The statute and our history gives an awful lot of power to our communities...It's as if we're trying to site a nuclear waste dump downtown."
Talk from "Fairness Conference: An Interdisciplinary Reflection on the Meanings of Fairness." Co-sponsored by the Emory Office of the Provost, the Emory Cognition Project, the Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, and the Emory Center for Ethics, October 18-19, 2012.
Talk from "Fairness Conference: An Interdisciplinary Reflection on the Meanings of Fairness." Co-sponsored by the Emory Office of the Provost, the Emory Cognition Project, the Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, and the Emory Center for Ethics, October 18-19, 2012.
Transcript -- Doreen Massey reflects on the issues that the panellists have discussed
Doreen Massey reflects on the issues that the panellists have discussed