July 3, 2009

  • WCFQ #4: Icky

    WCFQ #4:
    Does sex fill a void or
    does it create one?

    all_over_love


    For the record, I have never had sex. Yes, I know... I'm a 35 year old virgin. It's a fact that really only impresses you sexual types. I, fortunately (or unfortunately from your perspective) am an asexual. Which means, I have no sex drive. I'm simply not interested in sex for sex's sake. I suppose if I ever met someone who I loved and had a rapport with that I would try it, but since I have never met anyone with whom I felt that specific kind of attraction, I'm just not inclined to go out and do it for the sake of finding out what it's like. I've never been someone who gives into peer pressure and this societal urge to have sex, from television and music to jokes and fashion, is just not something I feel I have to agree with to be happy.

    Maybe this gives me a unique perspective in terms of what I can observe in how people and society treat sex. Which is to say, younger people seem to think having sex will cure something, yes, fill a void in their lives. Make them adults? Make them fit in better because "all their friends are doing it?" Who knows. According to various family members, I was never "young." Older people seem to think sex creates a corrupt society. Sex itself is an act that invites immorality into one's life. Pornography. Prostitution. And the people in between? It's mixed bag, ranging from the belief that having sex will "fix something" to the idea that sex is an unclean activity which only degenerates crave.

    See now sex is just a physical act so far as I'm concerned, and each individual attaches their own significance to it. For some, it is nothing more than a physical exercise. For others, it is a way to get closer to their significant other, to share something intimated of oneself with the one who you trust explicitly. Still others see it as a holy act which should only, ever be engaged in with someone you love for the purpose of procreation. Others label it in derogatory terms, as a dirty thing that is kept private because it is a necessary evil.

    Whether sex fills a void or creates one all descends from personal perspective. It both fills and creates a void and at the same time has nothing to do with such notions. Sex is a physical act which creates life. It is a way for two people to share each other with each other. It is a way for people to hurt each other. It is a dirty thing that should be kept behind closed doors or maybe even be replaced by modern science with cloning, splicing, and artificial insemination... It is a way for new souls to enter this existence. It is a means to an end. It is an amusing past time. Sex is the subject of many jokes. According to comedians, people make funny faces during sex. Apparently it is awkward and icky and makes a mess and/or babies. Sex is just something animals do in order to perpetuate the species.

    Sex got me a cute little nephew and another niece/nephew on the way.





    July 3rd


    The New Year of the Seminole Indian tribe of Florida begins on this date, and is celebrated with an annual Green Corn Dance honoring the new corn crop. Eating the first corn marks the start of a new year.




    The Festival of Cerridwen honors the goddess of knowledge, wisdom, plenty, and pigs.



    In Italy, this day is sacred to the Witch of Gaeta; while in Greece, the goddess Athena is honored.




    Sothis begins in Egypt, honoring the rise of Sirius.

    The Dog Days of Summer officially begin. According to Hellenic traditions, the rising of the Dog Star heralded the hottest part of the year for the Northern Hemisphere. The Dog Days of Summer, as calculated by the Greater or Lesser Dog Star (Sirius or Procyon), may continue from 30 to 54 days. A generally accepted period is from July 3 to August 15.

    The Greeks referred to the Dog Stars as Maera and Hecuba, and the Romans called them Canicula and Sycamine. It was called Isis Hathor by the Egyptians and symbolized by the form of a cow with disc and horns or as a cow recumbent in a boat with head surmounted by a star appearing from behind the western hills. In the earlier temple service of Denderah, Sirius was Isis Sothis and at Philae Isis Sati or Satit.  Sirius, Canis Major, was Al Shi'ra or Al Si'ra in Arabic parts of the world, and Canis Minor was called Al Jummaiza or Al Ghumaisa, "the Dim" from the fact that her light was dimmer than that of her sister Al Shi'ra. They were also called Al Aliawat al Suhail, the Sisters of Canopus. The Norse called Sirius Loki's Brand.




July 2, 2009

  • WCFQ #3: Lessons

    WCFQ #3:
    What is the difference
    between reality and truth?
    summerrr_x0


    Everyone has a personal reality and everyone therefore has their own personal truths. No two realities are exactly the same, even with twins. From the moment a being begins to perceive their surroundings, interpreting the data on a personal level and differentiating between "me" and "not me," a personal reality is created wherein truth is based on perception.

    There is no difference between reality and truth. You may listen (or read) as someone expounds on their personal truth, and from your own experiences you may discover truth in the other person's words. But this may not be the truth they intended to share and it may only be a temporary sharing of realities... you may decide after you have more experiences under your belt that the truth shared with you from someone else's perspective is no longer your truth. You have the power and right to differ with the truths of others.

    Truth is entirely subjective and cannot exist without experience. Experience is dependent upon how your reality agrees or disagrees with your expectations. It is through interpretation of your expectations that you arrive at your personal truth. When reality agrees with your expectations, it validates your truth. When you disagree with the circumstances, you may discover a new truth about your environment. It depends upon you however, whether you will perceive this new facet of reality or not and incorporate it into your world view, your reality. There are plenty of people in the world who are so wrapped up in their expectations that they rewrite the circumstances of their experiences, creating a personal reality which others perceive to be unhealthy. Their personal truths create this reality and this reality reinforces their personal truths. It's a vicious cycle of misery begetting more misery.

    In essences, we gather from our reality the lessons which agree with our world view or alter it. Either way, we arrive at a truth which is valid until we choose not to find validity in it. If we perceive ourselves to be victims, then that is what we are. It was true when I was a child that I was a victim because I let myself be a victim. I am no longer a victim because I choose to see the truth in my reality that all experiences contain the potential to teach a lesson. What lesson I choose to learn from my reality is dependent upon my perception of "me" and "not me." If I choose to see everyone and everything as one thing, then I cannot be harmed by others. I can only harm myself with my expectations. If I perceive a slight from someone, then it is entirely on me whether or not I allow that perception to alter my reality or not. In the end, it is my reality and my truth that is most important, and it is easier to forgive that which is "not me" and move on than become the victim of my own perceptions.





    July 2nd


    The Italian Il Palio in Siena is a festival of medieval games.



    In ancient times, the citizens of Rome celebrated the Feast of Expectant Mothers. At temples throughout the city, all pregnant women gathered to receive blessings and honor Bona Dea, Carmenta, Lucina, and other goddesses associated with birth and fertility.




July 1, 2009

  • July

    The Julian calendar was instituted in 26 BC and caused so much bureaucratic irritation that it was called the Year of Confusion. Until 44 BC however, the month of July was called Quintilis or Quinctilis, the fifth month. (The Romans were not very creative people and in fact, the Romans were not even Romans. They were Etruscan and adopted the Roman culture in its entirety to the point of obscuring their own past.) July was renamed for the murdered Julius Caesar who was born on the 12th. This was the calendar of the west for the next 1600 years. July is sacred to Apt (or Apet), Athena, Sothis, Spider Woman, and Rosea.

    The Irish name for this month was Iuil or an t-Iuchar, the border time. Traditionally during the last two weeks of July and the first two weeks of August, Sirius, the dog star, can be seen in the sky. The Anglo-Saxon name was Aeftera Litha, "after Litha," or sometimes Maedmonat, "meadow month." Hewimanoth, "hay month," was the Frankish name, and the Asatru call it Haymoon.

    The first Full Moon is called the Buck Moon. It is also the Blessing or Wort Moon and the Honey Moon, a name it shares with June's Moon. It is also called the Moon of Claiming, Fallow Moon, Thunder Moon, a name shared with August, and Moon of Blood (due to mosquitoes), a name it share with October. It is sometimes also called the Full Hay Moon.

    The sun passes from Cancer to Leo on July 23rd. The birth flower for July is the larkspur. Onyx, sardonyx, carnelian, turquoise or rubies are the stones listed for those born in July. The birthstone of Cancer is the moonstone or pearl, while Leo's stone is the ruby, onyx, or smoky quartz. Albite, chrysoprase, emerald, green tourmaline, opal, pink tourmaline, and rhodochrosite are also significant to Cancers, and amber, carnelian, chrysocolla, citrine, fire agate, garnet, pink tourmaline, ruby, and topaz are associated with Leo.





    July 1st


    The people of India and Nepal honor a promise given by the Nagas, snake deities, with the Naga Panchami. Nagas control weather, especially water, and they can also cure or cause disease, bring good luck or bad, and prevent or cause death by snake bite. According to legend, a farmer once accidentally killed three baby snakes while farming. The angry mother snake entered his house and killed all but the daughter who put a bowl of milk in front of herself for the snake. The snake not only spared her life but offered her anything she wished. The girl wished for her family to be restored and for the snake to refrain from killing anyone else that day. This was granted and the snake slithered away. Snake images are displayed on religious altars, and offerings of milk, grain, and food are placed at the mouth of snake holes. Live serpents are carried through town or pulled around in pots on carts. Plowing and digging are forbidden.




    In Japan, this day is sacred to Fuji, the ancient Japanese goddess of fire. Fuji is also regarded as the grandmother of Japan, and on this special day (which also marks the start of Mount Fuji Climbing Season) she is honored with prayers and burnt offerings.




    Rain today meant rainy weather for the next four weeks.




    In the Zoroastrian religion, Tir Jashan honors the spirits of rain.




    Nostradamus died today in 1566.




June 30, 2009

  • WCFQ #2: The Beat

    WCFQ #2:
    What kind of drum
    do you march to,
    or do you?
    NanLou4

    Run or skip,
    bound or bounce...
    Drums are made to set the beat,
    but I prefer a bit more treble with my bass.
    Music is not made with drumming alone.
    It takes all kinds
    to make the melody sweet.
    Life isn't orderly.
    It has its ups and downs.
    It swells and becomes somber by turns.
    No one marches to the beat
    of just one drum for long.





    June 30th


    Aestas, the ancient Roman corn-goddess of Summer is honored each year on this sacred day. Corn bread is traditionally served at Wiccan gatherings.



    This day is sacred to the Pagan and North American goddesses Ceres, Changing Woman, Chicomecoatl, the Corn Mothers, Demeter, Gaia, Ge, Hestia, Iatiku, Oraea, Pachamama, Spider Woman, and Tonantzin.




June 29, 2009

  • WCFQ#1: Brainiac or Superman

    WCFQ #1:
    Should people desire
    omniscience, omnipotence
    or omnipresence?
    ChristianHilton


    I'm gonna go gets me some super powers....

    All knowing, all powerful, or ever present...?

    Frankly, I'd go for the first. Knowledge is power after all. If you're just all powerful, you can make mistakes. If you're always around, everyone will always be bugging you to do stuff for them. The best of the three choices is being all knowing. Then you can be at the right place at the right time with the proper tools to get the job done before quietly slipping away before anyone notices you just averted disaster.

    Think about it. If you're all knowing, you can help people dodge the bullet without them ever knowing that their lives were in danger. You can influence society without them ever knowing it wasn't their own idea to include airbags in cars. The right word in the right ear, and the future is golden. Even if the ear is little Billy when he's five so one day he grows up to be president and brings world peace.

    I can dream...

    But regardless of what I could do with omniscience, it seems the most useful of the three abilities. Being all powerful could get you into a bit of trouble if you get mad and punch a wall or almost hit someone. Superman must have the patience of a saint, but Lex Luther would be dead meat if he got in my face. Same goes for any of the superhero/villain pairings. The temptation just to put some creep out of everyone's misery is the biggest drawback to being all powerful. The temptation is just too great.

    And I already pointed out the problem with being anywhere people expect you to be. It doesn't let you get any work done, let alone leave you any time to rest. I speak from retail experience....

    I suppose though that even being all knowing can be corrupting. Taking the Superman analogy a little further, Brainiac is the character who continually seeks to be all knowing, and look at the trouble he gets into. Albeit, his programing appears to be corrupt. Is it really necessary to destroy everything once you've learned everything there is to know about it? Is it really that arduous to share? Actually, I can come up with only one plausible reason why Brainiac might want to destroy everything after he's learned everything and that's so he doesn't get tied up in the minutiae of every culture he comes into contact with. In other words, he kills them off so he can move on and learn something somewhere else without having to worry about missing something when he leaves. Perfectly reasonable, if a bit selfish. Me, I wouldn't care if people came up with something new after I've moved on since I'm assuming being all knowing, I'd pretty much be immortal and able to come back later for a refresher. Regardless, Shakespeare says there's nothing new under the sun, so history, unfortunately, is bound to repeat no matter what culture you encounter. Really not necessary to destroy a culture when the next one may have  parallel development.





    June 29th


    The Bawming of the Thorn is celebrated in Appleton, England. An ancient hawthorn tree is bedecked with flowers, flags, and ribbons by all the adults of the town before the children are permitted to dance beneath its branches.




    This day honored Petosiris of Hermopolis (300 BC), an Egyptian astrologer and high priest of Thoth. After his death and canonization, his tomb became the site of pilgrimages.




    This is the best day to harvest herbs in the East Anglian tradition.




    This is a sacred day to Papa Legba, a powerful loa in the Voodoo religion. Originally a Dahomean sun god, Papa Legba is worshiped as the spirit-master of pathways and cross roads, and is the most important deity of the Vodoun pantheon.




June 28, 2009

  • WCFQ 52d: A Synthesis of Nature and Utility

    If you had an unlimited human resource and a choice limited only to 'civil engineering project' what would you get built and why?
    ChristianHilton


    Hmmm.... I would want to build something functional but which could be seen from space. I would want it to represent some aspect of humanity which could be idealized, but at the same time, I wouldn't want the project to be something which simply sat there after completion like a useless lump to be admired but not used in any way.

    If I had unlimited resources and labor, I would want to create a work of art which people could appreciate no matter their culture. I would want to make something that could be a cultural center as well as something which could inspire pride and a spirit of cooperation.

    So let's start with a building, or complex rather, since it would have to cover a large area to be seen from space. I would want it to be a place where people could and did gather to exchange ideas and grow, so I suppose it would be a school of some kind.

    Imagine, if you will, a face formed of buildings and topography. It would need to be near water because the water would provide energy and be a ribbon in the face's hair. The hair would be formed of hills and trees. The face itself would be formed from some very wily architecture. I suppose I would have to find some architectural geniuses on the level of Frank Lloyd Wright coupled with the work of modern sculptors like Andy Goldsworthy who is my personal artistic hero. He makes my brain go mew. I want to crawl into his works and not come out. One of the effects I would hope to obtain would be a changing face, something that was always recognizable as a face, but whose character changed from season to season or even from day to night (perhaps with lights at night?) And this of course would be visible from space.

    Should there be a museum on the premises? Maybe, but I think I would prefer a school where people could come to learn things which pertain to the earth... art like Goldsworthy's, environmental cooperation, interfaith studies, cultural studies.... things of that nature. I think to live, learn, and exist in such a beautiful space could only be inspirational to everyone who came there.

     



    June 28th


    Every year on this day, the birth of Hemera (the ancient Greek goddess of day) is celebrated. Festivals in her honor begin at sunrise and last until the setting of the sun.



    On this date in the year 1916, Reformed Alexandrian Witch and author Stewart Farrar was born in Highams Park, Essex, England.




    Ra Goes forth to propitiate Nun on the 15th day of Mesore.




June 27, 2009

  • WCFQ 52c: Knickknacks and Brickabrack

    Why do people collect things? What does it do for them?
    johnjihoonchang


    I can't say why others collect things. I collect things for various reasons. I find that some collections are symbolic. When I was a child, I collected unicorns. Horses were the first thing I learned to draw well, and unicorns in particular were my favorite doodle for a long time. It was something that people knew they could get for me, and let me tell you, I got some pretty ugly unicorns in my day. They were symbolic of what I saw as my separation from the rest of humanity... my "purity." The idea that I was better than other people was a defense mechanism to how I was being treated at the time, and unicorns were my symbol of perfection. I empathized with the unicorn as something which could transmute poison and be free. I didn't handle my anger well. I disassociated with it, which got me into trouble later on.

    Because later on, it was dragons, and still is. Dragons were my anger. They're my fiery temper, my rage. Dragons tear things up, but they also hoard things, and I was filling up on books. I still hoard books, but I don't hoard my anger. In Western mythology, dragons are hoarders. In Eastern mythology, they are teachers and protectors. The second thing I learned to draw well were dragons. Now people buy me dragons instead of unicorns. I've received some pretty ugly dragons. The unicorns have mostly moved on through various yard sales. I still have some of the better pictures I drew.

    Books are my biggest addiction. I collect all kinds of books, from comic books and fiction to books on history, mythology, religion, and philosophy. I call my comic book collection my retirement fund. I learned to read on Tolkien, so my love of fantasy was a foregone conclusion. It's in my dragon nature to hoard these treasuries of words. I started reading the nonfiction as a child because even as early as eight or so, I knew I wanted to write. There were other things I wanted to do, but I felt that a proper frame of reference would only serve to make me a better writer.

    So I don't know why other people collect the things they do. I'm sure everyone has their own reason for collecting, but I imagine it all boils down to feeling something. Their collections make them feel... something. I collect some things because they have a personal meaning to me. I collect other things because I like them and some day they may be valuable. I collect other things for their ability to inspire. I think that covers all the bases. I don't imagine there are any other reasons to collect things....





    June 27th


    The Sun Dance is performed by many Plains Indian tribes to honor the summer sun. A special crow totem may be adorned with feathers. Held by the relative of a victim of murder, it will indicate the identity of the killer.


    The Initium Aestatis was the Roman festival of the beginning of summer. It honored Aestas, the tutelary goddess of summer.


    Julian the Blessed, champion of pagan religions, died in 363.


    Rain today meant rainy weather for the next seven weeks.


    On this date in the year 1956, prolific Wiccan author Scott Cunningham was born in Royal Oak, Michigan. He was initiated into Wicca in 1973 and the Ancient Pictish Gaelic Way in 1981.




June 26, 2009

  • WCFQ 52b: Life is glorious

    What childhood memory haunts or delights you?
    wherever_we_go


    I had to think about this because I don't think anything haunts me, not really, not like it used to. I got better.

    Which is not to say that I am not still influenced by my childhood, but that I am no longer victimized by it. I don't think about it much. I worked through it. I talk (blog) about things that happened, and they still make me angry to a degree, but they're more referential moments to explain my development than they are sore spots that still give me pain.

    So when I talk about my great grandmother who abused me because I reminded her of my father, of being lynched in junior high school and other attacks, of being neglected by my family, or various other childhood traumas, its more a point of reference for me and a disclosure to you. If it still hurt me as much now as it did then, I probably wouldn't be able to discuss it at all. But my grandmother got old and senile and by the time she died, she wasn't even in her right mind. I can't be angry with someone who wasn't even there any more. The people who hurt me in school grew up and hopefully grew wiser. And being neglected by my family maybe gave me the opportunity to be my own person, develop at my own rate in my own time and to the beat of my own drummer.

    By the same token, I can't think of any single moment that delights me... stolen moments when I was alone in the woods, the sun shining brightly on a patch of silt in a sparkling stream, turning it to gold. Beauty, natural unasked for beauty in particular, delights me, always. Human manufactured art may amuse or surprise me, but to say that "I think that I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree," is no understatement. Anything human wrought pales by comparison to the wonders of nature, and they shaped me in my youth as surely as the misery inflicted on me by my peers and family. I still catch my breath at birds dancing in the air and the light on water. I look for shapes in the clouds and run my bare toes over the grass, wet with morning dew. I rub my fingers in pollen and marvel at its grainy, golden texture. I stop to smell the roses in front of the house as I leave in the morning. I examine leaves and caress them and wonder at their shape and life. I'm alive, and they're alive, and we're all alive together. Everything has its own presence and purpose. There is nothing that is worthless, no experience or thing, no matter how much it seems out of place. Everything is just waiting to teach us its lesson.





    June 26th


    The real Pied Piper is said to have visited the German town of Hamelin in 1284. Leading the children to their deaths in a sealed cave with the beauty of his music, he had previously solved the towns unfortunate rodent problem with the same melodies.



    This is the Green Corn festival of the Iroquois.



    On the 13th day of Mesore, a Holiday was held by the Shemsu (followers) of Horus.




June 25, 2009

  • The Viral Menace

    Life as we know it would be impossible without them. They are what separate us from the animals. They allow us to function as a unit despite our individual needs. They reproduce in our brain and are passed on to our children.

    Just by reading this essay, you may have picked up a few. and they are impossible to excise from the host animal.

    What the heck am I talking about?!?!?!?!


    Memes... they're viral and they're everywhere.

    A meme (according Wikipedia... itself a major vehicle of the great mnemonic migration that is the internet) is a unit or element of cultural ideas, symbols or practices from the Greek word mimema for "something imitated." Memes are transmitted from one mind to another through speech, gestures, rituals, or other imitable phenomena (like blogging). Many consider memes an analogue to genes, self-replicating and responding to selective (environmental) pressures. Richard Dawkins first introduced the word in The Selfish Gene (1976), applying evolutionary principles in the spread of ideas and cultural phenomena.

    Like genes, memes evolve by natural selection through the processes of variation, mutation, competition, and inheritance influencing an individual meme's reproductive success. Memes spread through the behaviors that they generate in their hosts. Memes that propagate less prolifically may become extinct, while others may survive, spread, and (for better or for worse) mutate. Theorists point out that memes which replicate the most effectively spread best, and some memes may replicate effectively even when they prove detrimental to the welfare of their hosts. An example of a very profligate meme is religion, particularly the Judeo-Christian-Islamic branch, which has proven both beneficial and detrimental to their hosts and other competing memes. The Christian meme almost wiped out the Pagan meme, but it rallied and is now competing in an altered environment.

    Memes are viral. Like the first single celled organism which adapted by uniting with other single celled organisms, keeping the best qualities to pass on to their offspring, our memes pick up or pass over other memes all the time, adapting, changing, and synthesizing offspring which can sometimes, but not always be traced back to their origins. We can say the concepts which evolved into our ideas concerning modern law came from Hammurabi, but we know that before his tablets, there were laws which governed human behavior. His laws, by our standards are quite barbaric, but through the process of mnemonic evolution, our thoughts concerning justice have evolved.

    Though the existence of memes is only speculative, by studying the past, we begin to see a pattern of intellectual, cultural, and emotional evolution which has nothing to do with physical evolution. The human animal has not evolved in millennia, but our thought processes continue to change even on a day to day basis. We clothe ourselves in memes. We use them like fire to light our way in the darkness of our own ignorance. Without them, we would only be animals, scurrying around in the dark, three meals away from barbarism (Thank you Plato). Without memes, we would have no recourse but to descend into anarchy, unable and ill inclined to pass our a-ha moments on to the next generation. It is through memes we communicate, sharing the concepts that grip us like an unwashed hand (eeww, gross! lol Germs...). Memes spread and cannot be stopped, no matter how hard any regime tries to sterilize our thought processes. Ideas change, memes seek new outlets. Like society, they can stagnate and turn on their hosts. Look at the Inquisition and witch trials.

    Genes and memes both have a biological imperative to spread. It's impossible for any human being not to interact and seek to share with others their experiences in life. We learn in childhood to keep some things private, but memes, like genes, seek expression. In terms of evolution, nothing exists without purpose. Even the appendix has been found to be part of the immune system. Memes serve a function, even if, like the appendix, it is not clearly understood yet what that function is.





    June 25th


    The Feast of Aine, once part of the Midsummer rites, honors an Irish fire and cattle goddess. Trips to holy wells was another feature of this holy day. In a procession, torches were waved over the fields for fertility.




    A law was introduced in Germany in 1233 discouraging the burning of heretics in favor of conversion.




June 24, 2009

  • WCFQ 52a: When all else fails... kill a meme

    Bringing up Dred Scott Tyler's installation art "What is the Proper way to Display an American Flag?", what are your views on desecrating the American flag? Does the American flag itself, a physical object, truly deserve the reverence that some Americans give it?
    light_khaki




    The American flag is a physical object, but it is also a symbol. The moment something becomes a symbol, the ways in which that symbol can be used are limited to good taste. That is, if you are a compassionate person, you will consider how your depiction will affect others who understand the meaning of the symbol.

    So, how do you feel about America? This limits and liberates the ways in which the flag may be treated. If you respect America and/or the ideals upon which it is based, then the ways in which you might depict the flag are limited to good taste. You don't wipe your butt with it or set it on fire. On the other hand, if you respect the ideals of America, but you feel that others are dragging America through the dirt, then the way in which you depict the flag becomes a political statement.

    When you take a symbol which is as widespread as a flag (of any country) and depict it in a way which is not acceptable, it is both a personal statement and a political one. It is an action approaching sacrilege, as with some of the art pieces depicting the cross in various unflattering ways. The depiction becomes the message. What was the "artist" trying to say and why did they feel they had to resort to such drastic tactics?


    Is it Disney or the Church being criticized here?
    Only the artist knows for sure.


    When I was a child, my mother had a large flag pinned up in the hall, and taped to it was a picture of Frank Zappa (on the crapper). At its most basic, the juxtaposition of Zappa and the flag was a reaffirmation of freedom of speech, and that is really what is at stake in any disrespectful depiction of the flag. When someone "disrespects" the American flag, what they are really saying is, "I do not think that our leaders respect the ideals of this nation, but they haven't taken away my right to freedom of speech (yet) and I'm damn well going to sensationalize my disgust and disappointment with the current regime by destroying this symbol in the hope that my message will reach as large an audience as possible." But I paraphrase.

    In the end, destroying a flag in any way is not art; it is a political statement. Altering any symbol in a less than respectful way is a political statement. Either way, our freedom to make such a statement is protected by the same institution that we attempt to criticize through the act of desecration. The old adage stands true: Actions speak louder than words. Most people who resort to flag burning have had their concerns about the state of our country and the direction in which it is going ignored or dismissed by those in a position of power, so they resorted to the attention-getting tactic of desecration of the symbol of the country they feel has let them down. Would burning an elephant or donkey in effigy have had the impact of destroying a flag? I think not. The flag as a symbol is a meme, and any attempt to destroy a meme will strike at the core of any human being. Memes are the framework to which we tie our understanding of reality. To destroy or damage a meme is to peel back a bit of the human psyche to the slavering thing underneath... and that thing tends to lash out in the light of day. It's why we keep the human beast well-insulated in a blanket of meme-enforced civility.





    June 24th


    St. John's Day, as an adaptation of the solstice festivals, was also celebrated with bonfires on hilltops to commemorate the high point of the year.




    Fors Fortuna, Lady Luck, had this as one of her holy days. This day was dedicated to her by King Servius Tullius who set aside a temple to Fors Fortuna beside the Tiber.




    The Peruvian Incas once held a festival known as Inti Raymi in honor of the sun god. The future was divined from the entrails of a freshly killed llama. The Aztecs also honored the sun with a feast day.




    Janet Farrer was born today.




    The Egyptian Festival of the Burning of the Lamps was held at Sais. This is the third great festival in Sais to Athena (Isis-Neith). In an under-chapel beneath the temple, lamps were carried in procession around the coffin of Osiris. It was by the power of light, symbolizing the life-giving power of the Moon, that Isis rekindled life in her dead husband.




    Ishtar and Tammuz were honored today, as were Astarte, Aphrodite, Venus and Adonis.




    In Scandinavia, the ceremonies normally associated with Beltaine or Whitsuntide take place at Midsummer. A Midsummer Bride is chosen and she selects for herself a Bridegroom. A collection is made for the pair who are looked upon as man and wife for the day.