Enlightenment…One Party at a Time
March 15th, 2009

Brooklyn, Lucid and Subversion

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A few weeks ago I rewatched Network, a perpetually-timely film that centers around an inveterate newscaster named Howard Beale, who looses his shit when told he’s being taken off the air.  He launches into an on-air oratory that details how Americans have come to be defined by their desperate, numb, automotonic lives; their only comfort coming from the narcosis of TV fantasy.  His rant culminates in the catchphrase, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore.”

Last night, I had three gentlemen, while not mad in the Bealean sense of the word, who are committed to not taking it anymore:

  • Mitch Joachim, who’s posing essential questions and solutions about how to reimagine the urban planning/architectural shit-storm we’re living in today; a storm that is directly and profoundly contributing to the continued slaughter of our environment.

  • Filip Noterdaeme, who’s Homeless Museum of Art begs (forgive the pun) museum powers-that-be–and those of us complicit to those powers–to question how their motivation to expand the edifice of the museum obfuscates the museum’s mission and alienates the artist and museum-goer alike.  Through producing HOMU, Noterdaeme both serves as an important countervailing voice to the corporatization of the arts, while being a generator of vital artistic expression in and of itself.

  • Finally, Jeremy Kirk, who calls us to question our complicity with Empire–with the forces that kill, destroy and subjugate.  Last night, he asked us to look at the lens through which we see the world–how our privilege as Americans (and most of us are privileged regardless of whether we are American born), is often directly proportionate to others’ suffering.  He challenged us to begin divesting ourselves of our privilege (and don’t worry, you can start small), confident that the liberation from no longer being complicit with violence toward others is greater than the sundry and temporary liberations that privilege affords.

I don’t know if Lucid NYC is subversive per se, but it’s my humble way to create an alternative to the prevailing modalities of social interactions; providing a safe (and audible) environment for people to create conversations that scrutinize and evaluate our assumptions about the way things are and the way things could be; a place, to quote Beale, where people can say, “I’m a human being God dammit.  My life [and voice] has value.”

Thank you for all those who made it out to Brooklyn last night.  A special thanks to Mitch, Al and everyone else at Metropolitan Exchange for hosting.  Until next time, keep questioning, keep human.

David

March 12th, 2009

Final Presenter Bio

Jeremy Kirk is on left.

Our final presenter is Jeremy Ian Kirk (pictured above, sans habit).  The name of his presentation is called:  Something’s Gotta Give: Resisting Empire in the Age of Obama. Here’s Jeremy’s bio:

Jeremy Ian Kirk is a doctoral candidate in Christian Social Ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York.  His academic interests include: the future of liberation theology, constructive praxiological response to contemporary world crises, resistance to contemporary U.S. imperialism, interrogating and critiquing liberalism, engaging postmodern and historicist critiques of religion, and the intersection of spirituality, art and social engagement.  Jeremy has been an activist with Witness Against Torture, a member of Dan Berrigan’s Kairos peace community and is a co-founder of Union Theological Seminary Students for Peace and Justice.

March 11th, 2009

March Presenters

So it’s set, we have an awesome roster:

1. Architect/urban-planner/activist Mitch Joachim (profile below).

2. Filip Noterdaeme of the Homeless Museum of Art (HOMU) (profile below).

3. Theological Ethicist Jeremy Kirk (profile above).

The event will be held at 33 Flatbush, 6th floor (Metropolitan Exchange, or MEx) serviced by most every train (map below).  Doors open at 6:30 with presenters at 8:00 or 8:30.  There will be a $5 cover.

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Filip and Jeremy are two good friends of mine–two of the most intelligent, uncorrupted guys I know.  I’m profoundly happy to have them present (Filip and I will be doing an interview).  Mitch is cool too (I just haven’t known him as long).

So please, put Saturday night aside for some Lucidity.

David

March 9th, 2009

Next Event

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Many of you’ve asked:  will there be lucidity in March?  The answer is yes!

Seeing as how Lucid NYC’s founder is not a very deft delegator, if said founder is preoccupied with personal issues (a high volume commodity this month), some administrative tasks run the risk of being neglected.  Fortunately, issues are at a manageable level and determination to create a great salon has returned.

Right now, we’ve got activist/architect Mitch Joachim (see profile below) on board as a presenter and we’re in conversation with several other great people.  So rest assured something phenomenal will be worked out.  We will update the roster at www.lucidnyc.com as details reveal themselves.  We will also shoot out a reminder email either Thursday or Friday with as much info as available.

Thanks for your patience and would love to see you this Saturday.

David
Lucid NYC’s negligent (and repentant) founder.

March 3rd, 2009

Why We’re "Hypocritical Planet Fuckers"

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I was at the Greener Gadget Conference the other day, writing for PSFK (which published my polite version of events).  There was a cool group of people there and some cool shit discussed, but there was also an ominous tone initiated by keynote speaker Saul Griffith. He detailed how we can afford about another 2.0 degrees increase in global temperature before life gets really uncomfortable (mass climate-induced migrations, mass extinctions, etc.  See his great slides here).

Many of us roughly know the information Griffith displayed, but it obviously hasn’t settled in.  I think many of us hope that because it’s snowing outside, it means global warming is somehow a theory—a likely theory, but a theory nonetheless—and our behavior modifications range from none to superficial.   This failure to change, according to Griffith, makes us “hypocritical planet fuckers,” and I’m inclined to agree.

So how do we stop fucking the planet (and ourselves as inhabitants)?  The global trajectory in terms of adding these 2 degrees is horrifying—basically within 20 years, which for this 32 year-old is not encouraging.

A good start, Griffith said, is to reduce our levels of energy consumption by ten times. But how do we do that in a culture where we are looked at askance for refusing plastic bags, where flights taken to forage in rainforests are PC, where not having the latest iPhone sends us in to social exile?

To a large extent, we need to opt out of the system rather than work within it.  Fortunately, the current system’s ability to deliver a high quality of life has been seriously called into question recently.  It’s a ripe time to present alternatives; not ones based in contradiction and opposition to all that has preceded this moment, but alternatives based on their abilities to create the maximum amount of happiness across the planet.

During his presentation, Griffith decried the need to cut down on air travel; because of his extensive travel and businesses, he expends 18 kW of energy annually vs. 11 kW of the average American.  He said one way someone like him could greatly reduce his footprint is employ video conferencing as S.O.P.  I managed to ask him why he didn’t do a live feed for the conference and he looked at me a little sadly and seriously and said, “They wouldn’t let me.”  He vowed (hopefully in earnest) that this would be his last conference he’d fly cross-country for.  I also asked him why he continued to consume meat in light of its environmental impact (although he only does so once weekly).  He gave a few excuses that I didn’t buy.  I needled him further and he accused me of sounding religious (which I’m sure I did).  We’re all filled with contradictions.  We don’t practice what we preach.  We cling to comfort and convention rather than respond to crisis.

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I think the first course of action in building an alternative way of life is stripping away everything that doesn’t work toward building the kind of planet that works for all.  Start questioning all of our actions:  each purchase, each gesture, each airline flight, each extra wrapper/packaging/sheet of toilet paper, each new or replacement gadget (check out the wonderful wattzon.com to calculate).  We need to observe and ask:  “Is this improving my life?  And if so, does that improvement come at the expense of others?”  If it doesn’t, we need to cut the shit out as best and as fast as possible.

This, I believe, is all we can do:  consistently reduce the contradictions between what we know and what we do.  When we start stripping away the contradictions, we’ll find a naturally occurring alternative mode of existence.  It’ll be a more streamlined, one stripped of the unnecessary. It’ll be an essential existence, filled with community, interdependence and craft, not gadgets.

March 2nd, 2009

thanks for stopping by

Due to some emotional disturbances, Lucid has been foggy lately, but will up and running in short-time.  Thanks for visiting and check back really soon for our tech report.

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