Politics, Philosophy & Technology
Devon
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Homepage: http://6stringsandexpensivethings.com
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Posts by Devon
Buying A Point n’ Shoot Camera
Jul 17th
So you want to buy a camera… where to start? which brands? what do you want to shoot? what features are important? These are the typical questions I field on a day to day basis — but which really matter?
FEATURES:
- Megapixels: The reality is that MP DO NOT matter… a 7MP camera is capable of outputting an 8.5″ x 11″ print
- Shutter lag: Make sure that when you press the shutter release the camera fires instantly… if not walk away
- Video: Most cameras should be capable of shooting 720P video at at least 27 frames per second and autofocus while zooming (unlike SLRS)
- FPS [frames per second]: How many frames can your camera fire? The average consumer model using a CMOS sensor averages out at around 2.5fps however newer cameras such as the ones that include the Backlit CMOS Sensor have the capability of firing 10fps…
- Sensor: As mentioned above the backlit CMOS sensor is the wave of the future… if your in the market for a point & shoot check out one of the following based on application:
- Zoom Camera: Nikon P100 (10fps, HD/HS video, Nikkor Glass, 26x Optical Zoom, 5-way Image Stabilization, MACRO mode,
- Point n’ Shoot: Canon SD4000, Sony WX-1, or Sony HX-5V
- Under Water: Sony TX-5 - Lens Quality/Capability: Nikon & Canon have been outputting great lenses FOREVER… its typically a safe bet… Panasonic’s use Leica lens’s which are also great quality anything else however is hit or miss….
- Lens Cap Contd.: Macro functionality… most point n’ shoots can get you within an inch these days… don’t settle for less!
- Processor: DiG!C 4 from Canon is fantastic and produces vibrant images however the Sony processor that stitches a panorama together seamlessly
- Memory: If it doesn’t take an SD card.. just say no… all camera manufacturers are moving towards SD cards (Sony, Olympus, Nikon, Canon etc.)
RECOMMENDATIONS:
- Sony DSC-HX5V: Backlit CMOS sensor, 10fps, 10x zoom, GPS built in, Full HD video, SD memory (Cost: $350)
- Nikon P100: 26x zoom, awesome macro, Backlit CMOS sensor, 10fps, 5-way VR, etc. ($400)
- Canon SD4000: 5x zoom, Backlit CMOS sensor, 10fps, ($350)
Tech Review: Nikon S8000
Jul 3rd
NIKON S8000
PRICE: $299.99
BUY Y/N: Y
SPECS:
14.2 Megapixels for stunning prints as large as 20 x 30 inches
New Slim, Stylish, Metal Design packs high performance into portable convenience for the slimmest in its class. Among compact cameras equipped with an optical zoom capable of zooming in at 10x or more as of January 15, 2010 (according to research conducted by Nikon Corporation)
Smart Portrait System includes:
- Smile Timer and Blink Proof makes sure you’ll always catch the decisive moment when your subject smiles and Blink Proof function shoots two pictures and automatically saves the one in which the subject’s eyes remain open
- Blink Warning, when activated alerts you that the subject may have blinked and allows you to retake the photo
- In-Camera Red-Eye Fix™ automatically fixes, while shooting, most instances of red-eye in the camera. You may never see red-eye again
- Face-Priority AF Nikon’s face-finding technology that automatically focuses on up to 12 faces
- Skin Softening smoothes skin tone at three different levels for optimal portrait
New Advanced Flash Control delivers natural flash images even when ambient or assisted lighting is typically insufficient, such as backlight or telephoto shooting
10x Wide-Angle Zoom-NIKKOR ED Glass Lens has a versatile zoom range from 30mm to an impressive 300mm telephoto coverage that gets you close to the action while capturing expansive landscapes. The NIKKOR ED lens is built on a proud heritage of producing precision camera optics that delivers superb color and razor-sharp results
Quick Performance with ultra-fast start-up, autofocus and shooting. Sports Continuous shooting enables high-speed shooting at approximately 3 fps for images up to 45 frames (3MP)
New HD Movie with Stereo Sound and HDMI Output Record stunning HD (720p) quality movies at 30fps with Stereo Sound, dedicated movie-record button and HDMI output for easy playback in camera, on HD-TV or computer. HDMI cable not included
4-way VR Image Stabilization System
- Optical VR Image Stabilization by lens shift minimizes the effect of camera shake
- Motion Detection automatically detects moving subjects and adjusts shutter speed and ISO setting to compensate for camera shake and subject movement
- High ISO up to 3200 at full resolution capability helps give you better results when shooting in low light or capturing fast-moving subjects
- Nikon’s original Best Shot Selector (BSS) automatically takes up to 10 shots while the shutter is pressed and saves the sharpest image
New Incredible, Bright 3.0-inch High Resolution VGA (921,000-dot) Clear Color Display makes images and movies come alive with rich detail and improved contrast. The large LCD makes it easy to compose and share your pictures with a wide-viewing angle and anti-glare coating
EXPEED Image Processing ensures high-quality pictures with stunning color and sharpness. Nikon’s comprehensive digital imaging processing concept incorporates the know-how and technologies accumulated throughout our long history of photographic and digital imaging development and is custom-tuned for COOLPIX. Applied optimized technologies render natural-looking pictures of incredible quality and quick response so you won’t miss that special moment
Subject Tracking will track a moving subject to ensure sharp focus. The camera will automatically track your subject – even if they temporarily move out of the frame
Quick Retouch optimizes contrast and color vividness for beautiful images

Macro shooting as close as 0.4”
16 Scene Modes for optimized shooting in various settings
Scene Auto Selector automatically recognizes the scene in your picture and selects the most appropriate scene mode (6) + auto mode
D-Lighting rescues dark or backlit images by improving brightness and detail during playback
Labor Politics: Final
Jun 28th
Part I: Whenever the working masses become oppressed, exploited and subjected to an overall lack of work, rebellion becomes the only avenue left through which they can exert energy. These rebellions are often short-lived [less than a decade] but they mirror the severity of the financial crisis at hand. The key factors that made the 1930s labor movement successful were: the significance of the depression, the political atmosphere and its players, and strikes.
Part I: The Depression
The economic depression of the 1930s was, to this day, the greatest the US has ever experienced. The average American during this time was still overly resistant to government handouts and as such the governments relief system was ill equipped to deal with the economic hardships of the masses. For those that were still working at meager wages, their struggle was internalized within the factory system, but for the average worker who was now without an income or job, productive effort and labor had to exert itself on another plane.
At first the poor and jobless resisted the thought of aide and internalized the pain and suffering of being a capable individual without work or a steady job. This sentiment was especially traumatizing when contextually, the average 30’s American was defined by his employment and the uni-polar power structure of the male dominated family. This singular paragon of power reliant upon the male breadwinner, not only left many families starving but also, robbed Americans of their dignity, respect and faith in government, an obstacle, which would require many years of economic stability to repair.
“Men and women haunted the employment offices, walked the streets, lined up for every job opening, and doubted themselves for not finding work… But as the depression worsened, as the work forces of entire factories were laid off, as whole neighborhoods in industrial towns were devastated, and as at least some political leaders began to acknowledge that a disaster had occurred, attitudes toward what had happened and why, and who was to blame, began to change among some of the unemployed.”
Part I: Politics & Political Mobilization
Prior to the economic depression the republicans enjoyed a long stint of political prowess and power largely due to eastern businessmen, who massively influenced and controlled not just the right but the left as well.
However, the depression creating ‘shifting currents’ in which new leaders were required to emerge [especially from the left], and FDR was the man who emerged. FDR’s election was the materialization of the disenchanted and disheartened “collective will”, flexing united muscle to put a candidate in office that was outside the traditional system of power that dominated pre-depression.
FDR was effective at marketing himself to the working class by promoting a system of “building from the bottom up, and putting faith in the forgotten man,” Piven and Cloward argue that this is the main reason FDR was elected. After his inauguration, FDR addressed congress laying out his plans for the “Civilian Conservation Corps, which was a public works program, and a massive program of federal emergency relief.
The Civilian Conservation Corps provided jobs at subsistence wages for a mere 250,000 men.” The idea behind FDR’s program wasn’t necessarily to create jobs, but rather, to stimulate the economy allowing the factories to re-open for employment etc. This plan in conjunction with the Federal Emergency Relief Act was very effective and helped to re-instill faith in government among the working classes.
Part I: Strikes
Labor rebellions in 1837, 1873, 1884, and 1893 exploded when unemployment hit catastrophically low levels, which resulted in collective organization and ultimately the restoration of jobs. Examples such as this one help to define the effectiveness of collective organization and the power that the powerless can attain through protest.
Looking at the 30s in particular, many small acts of defiance helped to bolster support for militancy. One of the most effective was that of “Rent Riots,” these were mass resistance movements against eviction. It is estimated that it helped to restore over 77,000 families to their homes in New York City alone.
Part I: Why Was The Labor Movement Successful?
The Labor Movement of the 1930s success can be synthesized in three ways scale, unison and grass roots success. As demonstrated in the Justice for Janitors movie, collective action can only be effective when multitudes of people act as one, in unison. Similar to Justice for Janitors, the Great Depression effected many lives and required an equivalent outcry, which stirred up the largest labor movement to date.
Yet, without grass roots victories Labor Movements become disenchanted quickly, which is why Rent Riots, Picketing, Unionization and recognition are the fuel required to promote any effective movement. Through these grass roots success a newly invigorated American public, found a means of sustenance and a platform through which their message could be heard.
Part II: Question: 1
With the formal recognition of the Workers Alliance of America 1936, the labor movement spurred on by the Great Depression solidified its victory. But with victory comes concessions and in this case the decline of the labor movement in the 1940s. Ultimately, bureaucratic absorption of key labor movement players and the over-institutionalization/organization of labor groups led to they’re fall from power.
Part II: Q1: Bureaucratic Absorption
With relief money flowing and victory in hand labor leaders sought to expand their vision of worker rights on a national level. Yet, while leaders played ball in Washington grass roots labor movements were losing momentum. Roosevelt’s reign brought about reinvigorated public support and through his relief systems, the government was able to take the helm of aide distribution once again.
However, once these movements failed the relief was cut off. Through the pursuit of more substantial reform on the national playing field, labor leaders inadvertently forfeited the ability to cause disruptions at a local level, which during the 30s was their primary basis of power. Grass Roots organizations could no longer influence on the local level (due to the pursuit of national reform) and recruitment numbers dwindled because of the inability of these organizations to produce results (e.g. Victories).
Since the labor movement was now a national organization, it was also now subjected to nationalized laws and required to play within the confines of socially acceptable governmental practices.
Part II: Q1: Institutionalization of Labor Organizations
Labor Unions post 30s started to institute national bylaws, which all local leaders had to abide by. These organizations shifted from working against the government in the 30s to working with the government in the 40s.
Organizers now wanted to “educate the poor” on how to cause “greater change” through lobbying Washington and major factories rather than local offices. The irony in goals like these was the complete castration of the movement’s power base – local, militant action. Which to a large extent, is why the Great Depression movement was so successful.
One of the major changes was the shift from collective local action to pressure the government and business to a system of dispute regulation, where unionized workers would submit claims to the company instead of protesting. These claims were received then small meetings ensued where “everyone talked over everyone else and nothing was achieved.”
It was this synergy of expansionism and over-organization that eventually led to the self-castration of the labor movement’s powerbase – the workers. Through the incorporation of labor leaders into politics and politics into labor organizations, the time of mass mobilization and power for the people was brought to an end and the pendulum of power began to swing in the other direction once again.
Part II: Question: 4
Prior to the start of “new unionism” in L.A. during the 1990s, undocumented migrant workers were not only hard if not impossible to unionize but also, unwanted by traditional labor unions. Yet, since the 1990s and the victory of the Justice for Janitors campaign, unionism amongst undocumented workers has increased drastically (1980s: 1,800 union members; 1990s: 225,000). This drastic increase in unionized workers is largely due to organizers focusing on education and grass roots trust as well as corporation visibility and worker persistence.
Part II: Q4: Education & Grass Roots Trust
Ignorance and trust are the two hardest barriers to breach when attempting to organize undocumented workers. But before an organizer can educate a worker on the extent of labor laws and its inclusion of the illegal workforce, they must first find a way to gain trust and legitimacy.
In Bread and Roses, Sam runs into this same obstacle, door-to-door petitioning is worthless without a foundation of trust and support on which to stand. For Sam he finds his “connector” in Maya, who not only helps him set up meetings with fellow non-union janitors but also acts as liaison and his trust base. Without Mayas constant pushing and belief in Sam, the Bread & Roses campaign could not have succeeded.
The key towards influencing migrant workers is that of trust, once you have their trust then you can educate on current laws, protections, aide and anti-exploitation tactics. Other components of post 90s organizing success has come from the ability of labor organizations to utilize people like Sam (young energy and idealism filled college students) to interface with disheartened and underrepresented workers. Plus increases to budgets, New Union Platforms having access to $20 Million per year for organizational purposes.
Part II: Q4: Visibility & Persistence
Gaining the trust and participation of non-unionized workers is only half the battle; the real challenge is in developing a viable and sustainable plan of action through which you can attack a corporation. In Boycott Forever 21, the women showcase an incredible degree of perseverance battling in the courts, on the streets, throughout the nation and around the globe for over three years before vindication finds them.
Much of the success in their campaign originates from not only great planning but also the sheer conviction and dedication the women hold in their hearts towards their cause. Through protesting in front of stores they manage to get local news media involved on a weekly basis and shed unwanted light on a corporation with an otherwise squeaky clean exterior.
The New Unionism approach has been successful in cities such as Los Angeles largely due to the linear pursuit of trust via connectors (Maya), education (labor laws), and the utilization of pain, frustration, and the oppression of workers to paint a vivid, media rich picture of the underbelly of American capitalism and its effects on those who work hard to attain the American dream.
The Educational Oxymoron… What’s Next?
Jun 19th
With the completion of my third year at university, a new fold in my life is making me look retrospectively and ask some tough questions about my educational experiences. What have I actually learned? Am I really preparing myself for the real world? Whats in a piece of paper? What am I going to do with the rest of my life? The typical questions that rattle around the mind of an imminent graduate.
The reality is the educational rat race is a linear pursuit towards a single piece of paper which claims that your ‘smart.’ The educational system which is (remedial at best) is a framework within which you must preform in order to add tangibility to the post-modern “American Dream.” In other words its a load of shit.
Coming from a conservative family I’ve grown up internalizing the inherent value of a meritocratic system and had to endure the long speeches about the ‘liberal preaching’ at University — not to mention its ‘brain washing ability.’ But I can now say with absolute certainty that if there is one thing my liberalized education has done to me, at the very least its the antithesis of becoming vehemently liberal.
The “open-mindedness” that is supposedly an internalized trait in the traditional liberal educational institution is total crap. Liberal or Conservative view points are just that — myopic and without scope. Each is just as close minded as the next and equally moronic. I find it utterly amusing listening to my classmates regurgitate liberal literature proclaiming individuality whilst they join the next college student in jumping off the proverbial bridge. THE IRONY!
I am quite sure my educational experience has been one of backwards mobility… I will leave this university more jaded, selfish and frustrated than when I entered on the wings of my conservative upbringing, which is impressive to say the least. The last four years of my education has made me a serious sceptic towards the ability of my generation to cope with the gargantuan problems that loom on the horizon. The environment is fucked, democracy is fucked, capitalism is fucked, international relations are fucked… everything is fucked or will be fucked….
So I’ve decided I am just going to go with the flow… I’ll vote for Freddy Frat-bro in 2012 and fill the rest of my life with Yeager Bombs, Haircuts, Muscle Milk and fist pumps… at least I would be networking.
Creating a plan for your small business
Jun 15th
If your thinking about starting a small business one of the most helpful things that I have ever done [outside of research, duh!] is create a business plan. Niveus — my last apparel company was founded on a grass roots/mountain town life style utilizing vibrant color and tapping into the local art scene.
I have since stopped creating Niveus products so hopefully the time and effort I put into my business plan can help you out while your in the planning stages. Good luck!
Photo Adventure Downtown!
Jun 14th
So today I thought my zero week class started… FALSE — anyways decided to take advantage of the super nice day + free time and do some shooting… here are the results!
Modern Political Theory — Final
Jun 11th
Political Division Facing
Our Contemporary World
In a world dominated by western ideology, economic power, and political clout, saturation of international political diversity is at a minimum. Counties are no longer individual entities but rather extensions of their GDP, political alignment and proximity to global hegemons. This myopic version of international diversity is perpetuated through turbulence among western hegemons and developing nations along the fault lines of divergent political ideology and global class struggle.
The majority [if not all] of international conflict is due to dissimilarity in fundamental political ideologies. In the context of east versus west, Islamized countries such as Iran are in constant conflict with democratic western philosophy. Since the ousting of the Shah in 1979 and the institution of a theocratic government led by the Ayatollah, Iran has been at odds with the western world.
In Good & Evil, Nietzsche writes that “good is merely a concept of social stratification which nobility employed in order to further segregate society,”[1] this same line of thinking can be applied to the concept of the first and third worlds. The United States or the ‘nobility’ have labeled Iran or the ‘peasant’ as the ‘third world,’ introducing a black and white paradigm, to which the entire world must now adhere, or face the socio-economic consequences. Not only does this system promote a uni-polar world where global hegemony reigns supreme, but also, sets in stone the western democratic model as ‘good’ and the eastern theocratic system as ‘bad’ – in other words it creates a template with which like minded countries must choose the lesser of two evils.
It is through this brand of international policy that the global hegemons hold developing nations at gunpoint. “When a consciousness sees another consciousness, it does not recognize it, but rather, recognizes itself in it.”[2] World leaders vindicate Hegel’s point to the extreme. A system of governance is graded on how similar or dissimilar it is to the democratic, capitalist system of the west, not through its own merits. In order for smaller countries to gain the aide, support and recognition required they must appease western paragons of power, and through this recognition the west retains its international status and continues to subjugate the third world.
The issue is one of interpretation and spin, not fact. In Weber’s Science as a Vocation, he states that one of the major differences between Germany and the United States [in the educational system] is one of values. “In the US students lack respect for the system and instead prioritize the individual, his research, and his accomplishments above his teaching style.”[3] This case study can be applied to how the United States, and the west as a whole, deals with developing nations and their governments. This trend of alienation and non-recognition in regards to grass roots political movements act as a proverbial boomerang – the west throws it away with only instant gratification in mind just for it to come back years later and hit them when they least expect it. In the 1950s when the Iranians went through their peoples nationalist revolution with Mohammed Mussedeq at the forefront, a leader of western teachings who wanted democracy, autonomy and an increase in the standard of living for his people. The United States refused to deal with him and preemptively ended his political career choosing instead to re-instate the Pahlavi dynasty with Reza Shahs son, Muhammad Reza Shah at the helm. The consequences of this action still reverberate on the international political playing fields of modern day. With the rise of a vehemently anti-west Islamic state in every respect, the United States has single handedly locked itself out from one of the top five petrol and natural gas powers in the world.
The irony surrounding situations similar to that of Iran saturate the history of global hegemons, ultimately resulting in their demise. The west, unwavering in its stance against the spread of militant Islam, communism, and anything non-democratic lack the wherewithal and foresight to see the hypocrisy in their own ways. Instead they choose to parade around under the false pretense of sharing global rights, freedoms, and ‘free’ democratic process with the oppressed peoples of the world. But what is democracy doing differently than other political systems. In the Communist Manifesto, Karl Marx says that one of the primary concerns of the Communist way of life is to “spread, settle, and establish connections to societies everywhere,”[4] isn’t that exactly what western style democracy is trying to do? This quirk of faith only builds when you consider some of the illegitimate regimes the United States in particular chooses to back. The military despot Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, the pugnacious prime minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu and the list goes on. It’s no large stretch to see why anti-western sentiment is growing at such voracious rates in the backwaters of the world.
The growing rift between east and west due to variation in political ideology, economic system and the bad blood of the past continues to elucidate the state of world power stratification. With the decline of classical imperialism the west had to reinvent itself in order to continue the subjugation of the east, the method, neo-imperialism brought to you on the wings of capitalism. Through this optic of economic dominance the west has maintained the global class structure for centuries.
In a global community run by coalitions such as the European Union, the bares to entry for young nations are vast and completely dependent on your relationships with political power houses and the state of your economy. Alliances are no longer forged in blood but rather in mutual trade agreements. As Marx said, “the move towards capitalism has robbed nations of their identities.”[5] This ‘lack of identity’ that Marx alludes to is the east versus west, master versus slave relationship strata, in which the east must give something to the west in order to get something, which in this case is recognition.
The move from quality to economic quantity is and has been, a western staple for quite some time at the domestic as well as international levels. In Science as a Vocation, Weber talks about the shift in academia towards education as a ‘business.’ Despite all of the negatives that revolve around it Weber sadly concludes, “Germany is moving closer towards a style of education similar to that of the United States”[6] where as Marx would say, “cash is king.” This academic model can be directly applied to the shift in global class struggle and its economic coefficient. Despite the pros of foreign systems, in order to remain competitive and relevant in the global higherarchial system some cons of the western world must be absorbed. The fallout of this however is that minor detriments to the United States with its booming economy can lead to catastrophic economic failure in a smaller model where every penny counts. In other words, the rigidity of the global economic system isn’t malleable enough to accommodate most developing nations.
Hegel’s diagnosis of the self-consciousness and master-slave relations can shed light on the state of global class struggle at the national level. “Self-consciousness is in it for itself, in that it exists for another consciousnesses acknowledgement.”[7] Similar to self-consciousness countries outside of the traditional global hegemon political structure seeks recognition in order to become part of club, but this comes at a cost. In order to be recognized by the west the ‘undeveloped’ ‘third world’ country must adhere to the role of ‘slave’ in the master-slave dynamic. This can manifest itself in the form of favorable trade agreements, semi-autonomous swaths of land for military bases etc.
The paradox in this power system Hegel articulates is that even though “the master is a consciousness that exists only for itself, it must be recognized by those it subjugates in order to prove its own existence.”[8] This distinction is made clear in 1st 3rd world wealth extrapolation. The west with all of its power doesn’t require the wealth of the east but, once it has assimilated a country into its economic system, the new country must continue to play ball by the hegemons rules in order to reify its higherarchial positioning. In this way the slave has more relative freedom from the master because it requires nothing from the master in order to perform its duties, it is a non-reliant entity.
The reverse Robin Hood system of the west in which, wealth is extrapolated from the pawns into the hands of hegemons isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, but there are ways in which both the west and east can improve that could be mutually beneficial.
Slowly but surely the world is moving away from the uni-polar power structure of western hegemony towards a multi-polar, more diverse political strata. This change is largely due to the increasing scarcity of finite resources such as coal, petrol and natural gas. Recognizing this, the west would do well to start moving in the direction of global cooperation, regardless of political ideology, economic standing or falling outs of the past. Cross-nation development of energy sharing, conservation, and efficient production should be the focus of modern super powers where the course of global power rushes not through military and economic might but rather, petrol pipelines. Only through the true democratic process as it was originally intended, a revitalized view of east v. west political ideology, and true acceptance of international diversity can the west continue its stint at the top of the political system.
[1] Good & Evil, Nietzsche, Essay 1, Section 2
[2] Self-Conscious, Hegel, Section 179
[3] Science as a Vocation, Weber
[4] The Communist Manifesto, Marx & Engels, Chapters 1 & 2
[5] The Communist Manifesto, Marx & Engels, Chapter 2
[6] Science as a Vocation, Weber
[7] Self-Consciousness, Hegel, Section 178
[8] Self-Consciousness, Hegel, Section 190






