Urtica ferox stings when encountered, and the effects may last some time. Here you'll find a mixture of original articles and links to others we found interesting.
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
We Want to Hear From You
Do you have something intelligent to say
about what vexes you in the world? Then send us an article, and if we think it's right for Urtica Ferox we’ll publish it.
Email:
DavidGWolcott@gmail.com
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Comments
Popular posts from this blog
The Bland, Banal Boredom of Woke Culture Most people criticise woke culture for shutting down free speech, for cancelling, for hypocrisy: we are allowed to be as horrible as we like to you, but don't you dare even think about discussing our beliefs, our identity . But the truly terrible effect of woke culture is the staggering boredom it creates by blandifying everything. " I' m bored; you’re bored; we’re all bored. By our books and movies and television shows, the endless blandness of the Netflix queue, by our music and theater and art. Culture now is strenuously cautious, nervously polite, earnestly worthy, ploddingly obvious, and above all, dismally predictable." In this fascinating article William Deresiewicz explores the origins of wokeness in the arts, and what we have lost in the process.
Making the Most Out of Other People’s Misery This is Sam McGlennon. Lets’ face it, he looks like a nice guy: honest, decent, well educated, undoubtedly with good intentions. Maybe that’s how he managed to land the ideal job. He describes himself as a “ climate risk and resilience advisor, as well as a sustainable supply chain expert, for NZ businesses and governments”. Sounds very cool, very now. I mean, advising governments , plural. Wow. Of course this might not be a real job. I mean, I write stuff, and it’s just possible that people from businesses and governments read it, so I guess I could say I advise businesses and governments. But cynicism aside, the best part of Sam’s job, what makes it ideal, is that he gets to take smug satisfaction out of the misery of millions of people who have lost their jobs and whose businesses have gone bust. How cool is that! You see Sam is a New Zealand greenie, but he represents the views of many environmentalists around the wo...
The Long March Through the Institutions In 1988 I was working as a proof reader for a typesetting company, and we were commissioned to produce political material for the (conservative) New Zealand National Party. I happened to walk past the work benches and James (not his real name), who was fervently left wing, was laughing about the finished print-out for the National Party. He had changed one digit in the contact phone number as a form of political protest, calculating that it wouldn't be noticed but would prevent people getting in touch. It was my first intimation of the long march. Sometimes you need a name for something in order to see it clearly, in order to pull together a whole range of disparate events and perceive the pattern in retrospect. I no longer read novels, respect teachers, take any notice of the the mainstream media, or feel able to discuss virtually anything at all with friends, family and workmates. This is all because the left has been stunningl...
Comments
Post a Comment