jeffreybenner wrote:I am posting this as a new topic because both the commentary on Barlow's essay ( http://eplaya.burningman.com/viewtopic.php?t=2221 ) and Mark Pesce's essay ( http://eplaya.burningman.com/viewtopic.php?t=2163) seem to have wandered far from the original posts.
jeffreybenner wrote:Anybody can do anything they want at Burning Man,
Rob the Wop wrote:jeffreybenner wrote:Anybody can do anything they want at Burning Man,
Not anymore. And as it gets bigger, the less freedom of action you will have. I'd like to bring my guns and shoot at flaming sheep that are shot out of a catapult while smoking a fattie.
...whole different direction, by just being themselves, as trite as that might sound
jeffreybenner wrote:Here is what Barlow and Pesce seem to have in common. They seem to feel that going to Burning Man has to cost thousands of dollars. That we have to get sucked into theme camps and expensive costumes and months of preparation, and saying "Welcome home" and such.
jeffreybenner wrote:Here is what Barlow and Pesce seem to have in common. They seem to feel that going to Burning Man has to cost thousands of dollars. That we have to get sucked into theme camps and expensive costumes and months of preparation, and saying "Welcome home" and such.
rogue agent wrote:jeffreybenner wrote:Here is what Barlow and Pesce seem to have in common.
Pesce thinks we're becoming a cult, creating our own mythology, deluding ourselves that what we do actually means something & leading ourselves down the road to some place dangerous.
rogue agent wrote:
Barlow's thinks we should stop wasting our time on frivolous partying & become political. He misses that in the process of planning for our party we're working on building communities. In the process of throwing that party we're exposing ourselves to a multitude of viewpoints which provides us a much wider frame of reference & lets us make better decisions. And along the way we're learning self-sufficiency & self-government, invaluable in politics.
Kinetic II wrote:Cultural terrorist....
Somewhere in a nondescript warehouse outside Reston, VA, an individual contributor is scanning the trillions and trillions of things flying across his screen. He sees his monitoring software make a "hit" on a post in the BM eplaya and flags it for his superiors to look at later in the day for further investigation by FBI terrorism teams.....
And this is how things get started sometimes.
Oh lets say like placing bugs in philidelphia mayors offices, letting planes fly into buildings. the list goes on.
Badger wrote:Oh lets say like placing bugs in philidelphia mayors offices, letting planes fly into buildings. the list goes on.
And with that I'm supposed to feel more enlightened - more informed - as to what your perspective is?
jeffreybenner wrote:Barlow completely backpeddled and said he just meant to say Burners should be more politically active. Well, sure. But that wasn't the sense of his essay at all, which was a scathing critique of Burners with its "self imposed ghettoism" and such.
Pesce held to his guns. He said he meant his piece to be a "wakeup call" to Burners. He has a sense, which he did not do a good job in my opinion explicating, that Burning Man is capable of being a generator of novelty (in the McKenna-esque sense) and that it is becoming a boring event. He is a very idea-oriented, intellectual gentleman who really wants to see new ideas arise out of Burning Man, and is not willing to give up on the event. I think in some sense I understand what he is saying. I do think Pesce lost more people than he gained with his comments about cultism and franchising.
DE FACTO wrote:This is something that needs to be repeated continuously.
Life is change. Get used to it.
RA
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