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Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » The Obituary Page Page: Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 134, 135, 136 ... 152, 153, 154  Next
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ptooey

ptooey Avatar

Location: right behind you. no, over there.
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 6:45am

I do wish there was a way to embed this, but the track's just not available anywhere else. Click here, and select the song titled Zero G (Flash is required). It's a fun tribute, good tune, and specTACular fretwork.
 
 
Can't play baseball
Can't clean fish
Can't sing opera
But none of us will ever know
The things that Stephen Hawking knows

 
Edit: Should've checked Jalan's FB page first. D'oh!



miamizsun

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Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 6:20am

 NoEnzLefttoSplit wrote:

the thing I took from the book was that it was possible to attain immortality by jumping into a black hole and screaming for help... your cries will be heard for ever.

 

the big red shift

you will eventually meld with the cosmos and recycle at the quarkian level

lol

NoEnzLefttoSplit

NoEnzLefttoSplit Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 5:27am

 miamizsun wrote:


i am a form of matter that does not emit light, absorb light, or scatter light

my only interactions are gravitational

obviously that was my dark feeble attempt at word play

but did i? no, but i do look up a lot

heck, i'm lucky to make it out of bed and drag a comb across my head
{#Biggrin}   {#Wave}

 
the thing I took from the book was that it was possible to attain immortality by jumping into a black hole and screaming for help... your cries will be heard for ever.
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 5:22am

 NoEnzLefttoSplit wrote:



Did you completely understand the subject matter?

 

i am a form of matter that does not emit light, absorb light, or scatter light

my only interactions are gravitational

obviously that was my dark feeble attempt at word play

but did i? no, but i do look up a lot

heck, i'm lucky to make it out of bed and drag a comb across my head
{#Biggrin}   {#Wave}


NoEnzLefttoSplit

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Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 5:04am

 miamizsun wrote:

rip stephen

the book, a brief history of time, was a rec by a fellow book club geek

one of the more interesting books that i have read (and re-read)
 


Did you completely understand the subject matter?
miamizsun

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Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2018 - 4:24am

 R_P wrote: 
rip stephen

the book, a brief history of time, was a rec by a fellow book club geek

one of the more interesting books that i have read (and re-read)

don't ask me if completely understood the subject matter 


R_P

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Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 13, 2018 - 8:52pm

Physicist Stephen Hawking dies aged 76
Obituary 1 - 2
cc_rider

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Location: Bastrop
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 13, 2018 - 12:01pm

Nokie Edwards, influential lead guitarist for the Ventures, dies at 82.

Steely_D

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Location: At the dude ranch / above the sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 21, 2018 - 6:37pm

 kurtster wrote: 
Respect for a man who had core beliefs and stuck to them, but he wasn't my pastor and I'm an American.
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 21, 2018 - 5:35pm


Billy Graham, America's pastor, has died
miamizsun

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Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 11, 2018 - 7:49am

 ScottFromWyoming wrote:

I have some reading ahead of me.

 
an alternative to violence and war?

that's crazy talk

rip gene 
edit:

watch this and be impressed...


ScottFromWyoming

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Location: Powell
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 9, 2018 - 7:29pm

 Lazy8 wrote:

Gene Sharp, RIP: The Man Who Tried to Take the Violence Out of War

He was one of the world's greatest theorists of nonviolent revolution. But don't call him a pacifist.

The first interview I did with Gene Sharp was for a foreign-policy roundtableback in 2003. He wrote afterward to say he mostly liked the piece but I should please not call him a pacifist again.

This took me by surprise. Sharp, who died last week at age 90, had been a draft resister during the Korean War and an editor of Peace News. He had studied Gandhi's life and work for strategic insights, and he had dedicated his career to showing how dictatorships could be overthrown and invaders repelled nonviolently. That all sounded pretty pacifist to me. What I didn't appreciate was how much Sharp associated the term pacifism with a purely ethical position, and how frustrated he had gotten with so many of the people who embraced the p-word. "I don't condemn people who believe in nonviolence as a way of life," he told me in one of our later interviews, this one conducted as the Arab Spring was surging. "For them, that may be the best they can do. And there are other people who have been witnessing and protesting and being true to their beliefs, who want to know how they can do this most effectively. But they don't always grasp the importance of doing more than that. Not just to witness against the wickedness of the world, but how to change the world."

Meanwhile, most of the people he was learning from weren't pacifists at all. He had searched the historical record for empirical examples of civic resistance, ranging from "rude gestures" to nonviolent strikes and mutinies, even the creation of parallel grassroots systems of governance. He discovered countless case studies all over the globe. The vast majority of people conducting these protests and revolts, he noted, were not ideological pacifists; they were figuring out tactics and strategies on the fly. Sharp, in turn, focused more on how they were fighting than what they were fighting for. In the battle over Jim Crow, his sympathies were with the civil rights movement—he had taken part in a sit-in himself—but when the segregationists used a nonviolent tactic, he made sure to examine that too. After all, someone else might find it useful.

Sharp compiled a long list of those methods, and he developed a theory of power to explain why they worked (and why they sometimes didn't). It's a remarkable body of writing: Sharp is, I think, one of the most essential and underappreciated political thinkers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. No mere armchair theorist, he then set about sharing his findings with dissidents everywhere from Burma to the West Bank. When the next generation of nonviolent rebels came along, they were deeply in his debt. (After the Baltic states gained their independence, one Lithuanian defense minister said of Sharp's Civilian-Based Defense, "I would rather have this book than the nuclear bomb.")



 
I have some reading ahead of me.
Lazy8

Lazy8 Avatar

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 9, 2018 - 3:16pm

Gene Sharp, RIP: The Man Who Tried to Take the Violence Out of War

He was one of the world's greatest theorists of nonviolent revolution. But don't call him a pacifist.

The first interview I did with Gene Sharp was for a foreign-policy roundtableback in 2003. He wrote afterward to say he mostly liked the piece but I should please not call him a pacifist again.

This took me by surprise. Sharp, who died last week at age 90, had been a draft resister during the Korean War and an editor of Peace News. He had studied Gandhi's life and work for strategic insights, and he had dedicated his career to showing how dictatorships could be overthrown and invaders repelled nonviolently. That all sounded pretty pacifist to me. What I didn't appreciate was how much Sharp associated the term pacifism with a purely ethical position, and how frustrated he had gotten with so many of the people who embraced the p-word. "I don't condemn people who believe in nonviolence as a way of life," he told me in one of our later interviews, this one conducted as the Arab Spring was surging. "For them, that may be the best they can do. And there are other people who have been witnessing and protesting and being true to their beliefs, who want to know how they can do this most effectively. But they don't always grasp the importance of doing more than that. Not just to witness against the wickedness of the world, but how to change the world."

Meanwhile, most of the people he was learning from weren't pacifists at all. He had searched the historical record for empirical examples of civic resistance, ranging from "rude gestures" to nonviolent strikes and mutinies, even the creation of parallel grassroots systems of governance. He discovered countless case studies all over the globe. The vast majority of people conducting these protests and revolts, he noted, were not ideological pacifists; they were figuring out tactics and strategies on the fly. Sharp, in turn, focused more on how they were fighting than what they were fighting for. In the battle over Jim Crow, his sympathies were with the civil rights movement—he had taken part in a sit-in himself—but when the segregationists used a nonviolent tactic, he made sure to examine that too. After all, someone else might find it useful.

Sharp compiled a long list of those methods, and he developed a theory of power to explain why they worked (and why they sometimes didn't). It's a remarkable body of writing: Sharp is, I think, one of the most essential and underappreciated political thinkers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. No mere armchair theorist, he then set about sharing his findings with dissidents everywhere from Burma to the West Bank. When the next generation of nonviolent rebels came along, they were deeply in his debt. (After the Baltic states gained their independence, one Lithuanian defense minister said of Sharp's Civilian-Based Defense, "I would rather have this book than the nuclear bomb.")




ScottFromWyoming

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Location: Powell
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 8, 2018 - 7:49am

 ptooey wrote:
Mickey Jones

Now, I'd always enjoyed him as an actor, but I had no idea about the drumming. Amazing -



 
Cool!
ptooey

ptooey Avatar

Location: right behind you. no, over there.
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 8, 2018 - 6:56am

Mickey Jones

Now, I'd always enjoyed him as an actor, but I had no idea about the drumming. Amazing -


miamizsun

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Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 8, 2018 - 4:05am

 triskele wrote: 
{#Hug}
triskele

triskele Avatar

Location: The Dragons' Roost


Posted: Feb 7, 2018 - 4:40pm

My heart hurts.  Fare thee well, now, brother.
rhahl

rhahl Avatar



Posted: Jan 28, 2018 - 8:08am

 miamizsun wrote:
can't recall anything by him off the top of my head

may he rest in peace

and  {#Wave}
 

ptooey

ptooey Avatar

Location: right behind you. no, over there.
Gender: Male


Posted: Jan 24, 2018 - 1:53pm

 ScottFromWyoming wrote:

*sigh*

Lots of better stuff to represent the Fall but man I used to blast this.



 
A surprisingly faithful (and good!) cover.
 
Always liked this -


 
and of course,


ScottFromWyoming

ScottFromWyoming Avatar

Location: Powell
Gender: Male


Posted: Jan 24, 2018 - 1:42pm

 ptooey wrote:
Mark E. Smith

 
Drat.  Not too much of a surprise, I guess, but still...I went through a huge The Fall obsession my senior year of high school.
 
*sigh*

Lots of better stuff to represent the Fall but man I used to blast this.


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