Posts Tagged ‘Barack’

Advertising

August 3rd, 2010

Egyptians used papyrus to make sales messages and wall posters. Commercial messages and political campaign displays have been found in the ruins of Pompeii and ancient Arabia. Lost and found advertising on papyrus was common in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. Wall or rock painting for commercial advertising is another manifestation of an ancient advertising form, which is present to this day in many parts of Asia, Africa, and South America. The tradition of wall painting can be traced back to Indian rock art paintings that date back to 4000 BC.[4] History tells us that Out-of-home advertising and billboards are the oldest forms of advertising.

As the towns and cities of the Middle Ages began to grow, and the general populace was unable to read, signs that today would say cobbler, miller, tailor or blacksmith would use an image associated with their trade such as a boot, a suit, a hat, a clock, a diamond, a horse shoe, a candle or even a bag of flour. Fruits an » Read more: Advertising

Recession America, the Myth of Gigs, and History: the Quest for the Beatific Cure

August 3rd, 2010

Recession America, the Myth of Gyges, and History: the Quest for the Beatific Cure

 

 

This paper contributes ideas to our society’s general efforts to get out of its current economic and social malaise. I argue that although a moderate (healthy) level of consumer spending should always be welcome to jumpstart a sputtering economy, this crisis moment also represents an opportunity to positively reconstruct our society by purging from our lifestyles any traces of excessive mass consumption based on credit borrowing, for this recession, as President Obama has often pointed out, also fundamentally represents spiritual crisis, a momentary dent in America’s self-confidence, whose origins we can trace to an ethos of excess long promoted by the corporate technocrats of a consumerist way of life built on personal deficit spending and basically regressive financial speculative schemes. Any good solution to such a crisis must » Read more: Recession America, the Myth of Gigs, and History: the Quest for the Beatific Cure

U.s. Congressman Keith Ellison — Not Your Run-Of-The-Mill Politician

August 2nd, 2010
Something I Said
Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison
Dwight Hobbes
MN Law & Politics archives Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison is the most intriguing political entity since Dick Gregory ran for president. Like Gregory, Ellison ran not so much as a politician, but, instead, as an activist. And, like Gregory, his being black has both everything and nothing to do with his significance. Society’s trying, but isn’t yet colorblind: accordingly, the first thing anyone notices, on gazing at the good congressman, is that he’s black. And with that light skin and those Caucasian features (a hit with white and black folk alike) that he’s the very image of a non-threatening black man. So, undeniably, being black is prominent in this guy’s public profile. Ellison, though, did not ride the race card to Capitol Hill. He stumped on humanist issues that crossed color and class lines. And went one better. Dick Gregory lost. Ellison, after winning Minnesota’s Fifth District congressional » Read more: U.s. Congressman Keith Ellison — Not Your Run-Of-The-Mill Politician