Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Waste Management - podcast review

Two podcasts, two witness reports on how civilians turn in their waste. The first is Distillations (feed); the witness brings an old TV to a special gathering point for discarding electronic equipment (in short eWaste) in New York City and is surprised to find hardly anybody there. So many people live in the metropolis and each day so many of them throw away old PCs, TVs, printers and such. The subtext is that all of this waste is dumped with regular garbage and that that is a bad thing. The show pays attention to heavy metals and their distinctive uses and qualities - it is a chemistry podcast after all.

A central point, any which way you look at it, simply is: no matter goes lost, no matter is created anew. I would add: nature recycles and makes us do the same, even if we do not do so actively and consciously. The other podcast, Social Innovation Conversations (feed), delivers reports from the UK and Germany. Witnesses observe traffic jams around garbage collection; everybody seems to do it consciously. The podcast is a panel discussion that becomes rather heated. Recycling as a behavior is both attacked and propagated with a zeal that borders on the religious.

Here is a point being made: in Germany (and Britain is about to follow) public morality has developed a dedication for recycling that, with backing of law enforcement, requires of citizens to meticulously reduce their waste, sort it out, deliver it to the right address and what not. If upon scrutiny we could conclude that none of that time consuming activity is in actuality contributing to a better environment, than what is it? A new religion with its meaningless rituals? This critique is voiced by speaker Thomas Deichmann who goes on to not just reproach this latent puritanism, but continues to dismissively depict any form of civic involvement in waste management as a total waste of time and suggests to leave any possible problem entirely to engineers, to producers and large scale technological solutions. He even goes on to actually deny there are real problems of resources running out and pollution becoming irretrievably devastating.

His position is met with counter-critique by two female speakers named Julie Hill and Julia Hailes, which on account of sounding so similar are mixed up by the audience. The two of them disagree with Deichmann on all points. Civic waste management is not a waste of time, there is a serious problem of sustainability and the closing words sum it all up. They mention facts, which Deichmann fights with data about which one of the Julies exclaims indignantly: "That is just NOT true!"

A very interesting point comes up when the advantages of individual waste management are evaluated. The adherents emphasize in addition to the concrete contribution to the environment the 'feel good' factor. People reduce and separate their garbage and that renders the satisfaction of doing the right thing. Inherently this shows a point of agreement: the morality of recycling bears the qualities of religion. In addition I observed that the attackers of this religiousness have their own zeal, which struck me as coming out of belief (for example in human inventiveness and in historical progress) rather than dry rationality and evaluation of facts. I am left with the feeling I witnessed a church dogma discussion between Catholics and Protestants, in which the practical problems are forgotten in a competition of world views.

The way I see it, we are stuck with our waste and so we need to manage it, any which way you perceive it as a lethal problem or just a mild annoyance. Similarly, we are facing ever-growing cost of obtaining the raw materials for production and could consider addressing those costs by using the commodities in a more effective fashion regardless of the question whether the resources are actually running out or simply harder to come by. And also, there is enough data to agree the climate is warming and there is plenty pollution we commit and could crank down, regardless of the question whether that is going to deeply or just hardly compensate further global warming. We need not either completely rely on technological innovations or attempt to change behaving how we have been behaving, we need both. Practical problems ask practical solutions. Definitions of what the problem is and how deep it goes, as far as I am concerned, may be as practical and flexible as can be. Otherwise the discussions are at best semantic and at worst of the religious kind that only sets us apart.

More Distillations:
Distillations - a chemistry podcast review.

More Social Innovation Conversations:
Social Innovation Conversations - podcast review.


More environmental podcasts:
Exploring Environmental History - podcast review,
Free riders - Philosophy Bites,
October 15, 2007 - blog action day.

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Controversial subjects on Anne is a Man!

Three upcoming posts in this blog will report on podcasts that contained very heated discussion and if not that touched on such a controversial subject, heated discussion simply must follow. And if you thought the death of Socrates could be one such subject and wouldn't result in a podcasted panel discussion with speakers doing nothing but heartily disagree, I can only wish you understand Dutch, for this is one that happened in a Dutch language podcast.

Another subject that came up and exposed wall to wall opinions, expressed with a zeal one would expect in debates on religion was the issue of waste management. Should your everyday individual citizen bear the responsibility for reducing and separating household garbage and if so, why? We'll hear advocates of recycling and hear ardent opponents of the very same.

The last subject expands on one that this blog is explicitly interested in. I keep reporting about the controversies around stem cell research in particular and bio-technology in general.In an upcoming post I'll report a philosophical discussion that takes these issues to the higher level of weighing human life. Can we even begin to think of asking the question whether life can be weighed, can have comparative value and not dive head first in controversy, before even contemplating the question itself, let alone answer it?

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Tuesday, July 1, 2008

146 podasts reviewed by Anne the Man

UPDATE: we now have 217 podcasts reviewed. (link)

It is the first of the month again and so I post in alphabetical order all podcasts I reviewed, linked to the last post:
  1. 12 Byzantine Rulers
  2. Africa (Stanford Travel)
  3. Africa Past and Present
  4. All Things Medieval
  5. American Environmental and Cultural History (Berkeley ESPM 160AC)
  6. American History before 1870
  7. Ancient and Medieval Podcast
  8. Are we alone?
  9. BBC History Magazine
  10. Big Ideas (TVO)
  11. Bike Radar
  12. Binge Thinking History
  13. Bioethics podcast
  14. the Biography Show (TPN)
  15. Biota Podcast
  16. Birth of the Modern (Arizona State University)
  17. Bommel Hoorspel
  18. British History 101
  19. Car Talk
  20. CATS 2 Culture and Technology Studies (UCSD)
  21. Celtic Myth Podshow
  22. CFR Podcast
  23. Chronicles Radio Dispatches
  24. Church History
  25. Dan Carlin's Common Sense
  26. Dan Carlin's Hardcore History
  27. David Kalivas' World History
  28. Distillations
  29. the Economist
  30. Engines of our Ingenuity
  31. English 117S (Berkeley)
  32. Everything Lincoln
  33. Existentialism in Literature and Film (Phil 7 - Berkeley)
  34. Exploring Environmental History
  35. F1Cast
  36. Fresh Air (NPR)
  37. From our own Correspondent (BBC)
  38. Geography 130 (Berkeley)
  39. Geography of World Cultures (Stanford)
  40. Global Geopolitics (Stanford)
  41. Hank's History Hour
  42. Hannibal (Stanford)
  43. Haring Podcast
  44. Historical Jesus (Stanford)
  45. History 106B (Berkeley)
  46. History 167B (Berkeley)
  47. History 181B (Berkeley)
  48. History 2311 (Temple College)
  49. History 2312 (Temple College)
  50. History 4A (Berkeley)
  51. History 5 (Anderson - Berkeley)
  52. History 5 (Laqueur - Berkeley)
  53. History 7B (Berkeley)
  54. History according to Bob
  55. History Network
  56. History of Holland (Librivox)
  57. History of Rome
  58. History of the International System (Stanford)
  59. History Podcast
  60. Historypod
  61. Historyzine
  62. ICT Update
  63. In Our Time (BBC)
  64. In the Media (WNYC)
  65. Inspired Minds (Deutsche Welle)
  66. Interview Vrijdag (VPRO)
  67. Introduction to German Politics (Oxford)
  68. Introduction to Language (Arizona State University)
  69. Irving Poetry podcast
  70. ITV
  71. Jung Podcast
  72. KMTT
  73. KQED Forum
  74. Language (UCSD)
  75. LSE Podcast
  76. Marathon Interview (VPRO)
  77. Matt's Today In History
  78. Medieval & Renaissance Studies Events (Virginia Tech)
  79. Medieval Podcast
  80. Midwest Writer
  81. Military History Podcast
  82. Missing Link
  83. MMW 3, the medieval heritage (Chamberlain - UCSD)
  84. MMW 3, the medieval heritage (Herbst - UCSD)
  85. Muscular Judaism
  86. My Three Shrinks
  87. Napoleon 1O1 (TPN)
  88. National Archives Podcast
  89. Nonviolence (Berkeley PACS 164A)
  90. Nonviolence today (Berkeley PACS 164B)
  91. NRC FM
  92. Only in America
  93. Open Source
  94. OVT (VPRO)
  95. Oy Mendele!
  96. Parnell's History Podcast
  97. Peopletalk's Podcast
  98. Physics for future Presidents (Berkeley)
  99. Philosophy 103
  100. Philosophy 7 (Berkeley)
  101. Philosophy Bites
  102. the Philosophy Podcast
  103. Podcasts on Medieval Texts (Virginia Tech)
  104. Podwatch
  105. Prosperity show
  106. Radiolab (WNYC)
  107. Rav Dovid's
  108. Redborne History
  109. Religion and Law in the US (UCSD HIUS 155A)
  110. Religion and Law in the US (UCSD HIUS 155B)
  111. Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean
  112. Rhetoric 10 (Berkeley)
  113. Rpgmp3
  114. Science Friday (NPR)
  115. Sex History Podcast
  116. Shrink Rap Radio
  117. Šimek 's Nachts (RVU)
  118. the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe
  119. Social Innovation Conversations
  120. Sonic Society
  121. Speaking of Faith (APM)
  122. Stanford U History
  123. Stem Cells: Policy and Ethics (Stanford)
  124. Sunday Sundown
  125. Talking Robots
  126. TdF London
  127. Teaching American History
  128. TED Talks
  129. That Podcast Show
  130. the Things We Forgot To Remember
  131. Times Talks
  132. Tudorcast
  133. UCLA Israel Studies
  134. University Channel Podcast (aka UChannel Podcast)
  135. Volkskrant Podcasts
  136. We the People Stories
  137. What is Judaism?
  138. Wise Counsel
  139. the Word Nerds
  140. the Writing Show
  141. Wynyfryd's meditation room
  142. the Your History Podcast
  143. Your Purpose Centered Life
  144. zencast
  145. zoem
  146. האוניברסיטה המשודרת
If you know of interesting podcasts that you think should be reviewed, please let me know through the comments page. Or send me mail...
Thanks in advance,
Anne Frid de Vries (in one word)
AT
Yahoo DOT co DOT uk


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Monday, June 30, 2008

Reviewed this month on Anne is a Man!

Tomorrow I will bring out the updated list of reviewed podcasts, as usual on the first of the month. Before that, I would like to point out the new podcasts that were added this month.

In the category of History Podcasts:
Big Ideas (TVO), (review, site, feed)
TV lectures about various subjects on podcast.


All things Medieval, (review, site, feed)
Podcast on whatever is related to the late Middle Ages - not just dry history.

Church History, (review, site, feed)
Denominational history of the medieval Christian Church


Birth of the Modern (Arizona State University), (review, site, feed)
Podcast course covering elements of history from late Middle Ages to the early modern age.


Things We Forgot To Remember (BBC and Open University), (review, site, feed)
History podcast on how history is construed.

Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean, (review, site, feed)
History of Christianity in the early apostolic phase.


In the category of Science:
Science Friday (NPR), (review, site, feed)
Popular science program

Stem Cells: Policy and Ethics (Stanford), (review, site:Stanford on iTunes U, feed)
Five lectures covering the techniques, the research, the law and the ethical issues of stem cell research.


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What is RSS - Read Anne is a Man automatically

RSS is a technology that is being used by millions of web users around the world to keep track of their favorite websites. RSS delivers the latest posts on my blog directly to you, so that you no longer have to come browsing to Anne is a Man.

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Sunday, June 29, 2008

American Civil Rights Movement

I wanted to point you to two older Berkeley lecture series, that each in their own way pay attention to the American Civil Rights Movement. I like comparative listening and I can recommend it to everybody. There are drawbacks to both series, but I also think each have their quality.

Professor Michael Nagler's lecture series about Nonviolence (PACS 164A and PACS 164B) pay extensive attention to Mahatma Gandhi, but right after that move on to Martin Luther King. Professor Jenifer Burns' History 7B, consecutively rolls through the history of the US since the civil war and allots two lectures towards the end to the civil rights movement.

There were two things new to me. I have no idea how new to Americans, but to me as a non-American even with a legal training (which means I knew both the Plessy case and the Brown case), there was some new insight to gain. First of all, it is the fact that the movement already began in the 1930's and that the building up to the Brown cases was carefully planned and prepared. The famous marches and the profound appearance of Dr. King in the 1960's, which I identified as The movement, was more of a climax. The second aspect is one I could have reconstructed myself, but for which I needed Jennifer Burns to be pointed at. Since the abolition of slavery, under Lincoln, the blacks tended to favor the Republican party (as Lincoln was a Republican) and this also counted for the strength of the Democrats in the south. In the 1960's it is Lyndon Johnson, who moves the Democrats into the principles of Civil Rights, which means a shift of the Black vote towards Democrats, but simultaneously, a losing of ground in the south which is an established fact today.

More American History:
Whittaker Chambers,
Scopes Trial,
American History before 1870,
The American Constitution's British roots - BTHP,
US History - from Civil War to Present.

More Nonviolence:
Non Violence readers,
Non Violence.

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