Wednesday, June 04, 2014

Unraveled

A Novel About a Meltdown

By Alda Sigmundsdóttir
Enska Textasmiðjan, 2013

Another book written by a blog-pal! This time it is a full-fledged novel by Alda Sigmundsdóttir whose blog, The Iceland Weather Report, was certainly the most accomplished Icelandic blog published in English. It reached its peak in influence during the Icelandic banking crisis of 2008. Alda found herself thrust upon the world stage, giving interviews and commentary to a wide variety of international media. I’ve followed her since 2004 and have referenced her work in numerous FITK posts. Alda has written three other books, all of which were well-received, I've read all of them except Icelandic Folk Legends, and some of those stories I’ve read on her blog.

That said, it was with not without some trepidation that I picked up this book. As I got into it, I soon discovered what I had suspected—it wasn’t the type of book I would usually read. It is a dysfunctional relationship novel played out over the background of the Icelandic financial meltdown. At times it could even be considered a “bodice-ripper.” The main character, Frida, is a free-spirited young Icelandic woman who ends up in a loveless marriage with the UK’s ambassador to Iceland (who is also hiding a couple of big secrets). Things are further complicated when Frida takes an interest in hunky Baldur, a former investment banker who she meets in the remote Westfjords.

Alda’s writing is clear and direct; her descriptions of Iceland and Reykjavík give this book some depth and shows how the people of Iceland were affected during the crisis of 2008. A good companion to this novel is her first book, Living Inside the Meltdown, as well as her exceptional blog posts of 2008-2009.  In contrast, the main character, Frida, is somewhat shallow and her lovers are (except for the sex scenes) lightly drawn.

The book did hold my interest although Maria Alva Roff’s 88 was more to my tastes—a wild ride covering some of the same territory but with a vastly different approach. Auður Ösp's earlier blogs (non-fiction), while not polished, give an even more intimate look at modern Iceland. Each of these writers/bloggers captures facets of Icelandic life in their own way. Their collective charms must be working as I have remained a fan of their writing for ten years!


By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Alda Among the Hidden People

The Little Book of the Hidden People:
Twenty stories of elves from Icelandic folklore
by Alda Sigmundsdóttir

This short eBook from Alda is another in her continuing series of informal yet almost scholarly works about Icelandic culture.  As with her previous efforts, the only fault I can find with any of them is that I'm finished too quickly.

This book is a welcome respite from “cute” and sanitized folk stories. There are lots of sexual escapades, some very peculiar Icelandic customs, as well as some touching tales of love, love ending in grief. Alda does a great job in filling in the background on the stories, some of which would be real ‘head-scratchers’ without her explanations.


UPDATE: It's now available on Amazon.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 3 


Friday, July 28, 2017

Insider Iceland

Alda Sigmundsdóttir has been a reliable source of information on Iceland for over a dozen years now. I’ve been following her Iceland Weather Report blog for just as long. It was a must-read during the 2008 kreppa and its aftermath, when her opinions were featured in numerous articles and even on BBC broadcasts!

Although her old blog is pretty much dormant, you can still get a glimpse of her activities at her FaceBook page. Alda has kept writing about Iceland and now heads her own mini-publishing empire. Although I’ve got most of her titles, and have even been a beta reader for her last two, it is still a thrill when I get one of her books in the mail, complete with Icelandic postmark and personal inscription:



This is the book I was looking for seventeen years ago when I first started visiting Iceland. It is concise, packed with information about Iceland and its current “tourism situation” as well as a rumination on what a tourist in Iceland can expect and how a tourist should behave to maximize his or her experience. This is a far cry from the usual guide book. If you are thinking about going to Iceland, get this book! As I intimated last December, the Icelandic coverage at FITK is diminishing, I’ve done it too long, things are changing there so fast that now I’m too far out of the loop and another trip back doesn’t seem likely. So I say hats off to Alda, for this labor of love, for keeping the dream of Iceland (and its sometimes bitter truths) alive. 

By Professor Batty


Comments: 1 


Wednesday, April 07, 2004

Iceland

Reference:

Airwaves

Auroras

Book reviews

Borgarleikhúsið

Directory

Silja

Tónlist

Weather

Þjóðleikhúsið

Selected Flippist impressions of Iceland:

2025

Iceland Airwaves 2025
A Parish Chronicle
Verðbólga
Sódóma Reykjavík
Reykjavík Abstracts
#61
I Want To…
Red Dog Farm
Öx Redux
Echoes
Nine Muses

2024

Touch
Trilogy
Hívtur Dagur
Hótel Borg
Reykjavík University
Tombstone for a Child
Drekinn
Symmetry
Reykjavíkur
Your Absence is Darkness
Song in Blue
Cold Fear
Öx

2023

Fyrir ást á pylsum
Iceland Airwaves 2023 Index
Eleven Years Ago Today
Dreaming of Airwaves III
Blackout
The Dancer
Terra Incognita
Dance Party
Touched
Back to School
Be the Wolf
Granny Pants

2022

Search for a Dancer (2022 trip memoir)

Hekla
The Calm Before the Storm
Between Mountains
Hotel Borg
Hjartagarður
Hallgrímur and Silja
First Lady
Fríkirkjan
Listasafn Reykjavíkur
Faktorý
Sunrise Session II

2021

Harpa
Awesome Auðurs
Hand Knits and Wool
Kjötborg
Harbour Views
School of Housewives
IWR
Husavík
Peculiar Postcards
Sunrise Session
Jósa and Lotta

2020

Marta’s Dance
Jófrður’s Chicken
More Iceland in Autumn
The Dogs of Iceland
Poppy’s Return
She Made a Difference
Miss Iceland
New Dreams
Ghost Town
Hard Times in Ultima Thule
Reykjavík Calling
Virtual JFDR

2019

The Sacrament
Iceland Airwaves… Not!
Iceland Airwaves Begins!
Iceland Airwaves 2019
The Island
Alda’s Iceland Update
Faces in the Crowd
We Are Proud Autistic Women
Living the Dream
Valkyrie
Ófærð
Duos

2018

Pied-á-terre
Hot Dog Stand
Airwaves
Hitman’s Guide to Housekeeping
Páll Óskar
Iceland Airwaves Countdown #2
Iceland Airwaves Countdown #1
101
Snow Day
The Legacy
The Sun’s Gone Dim…
Woman at 1000°

2017

Things are Going Great
Either Way
Bokeh
Imagine…
Snowblind
The Undesired
Tour Guide
Pascal Pinon With Strings
Shadow District
Gnarr
Art Vs. Nature
Icelandic Invasion at ASI

2016

Jófríður Ákadóttir
Ekki vanmeta
Bolstaðarhlið 8
Dreamscapes
Sundur and the Circle
Reykjanesfolkvangur
Signs of the Times
Iðno at Night
Strangers in the Night
Table for One
Morning Commute
Tough Choices
All those moments…

2015

The Situation Girls
Ufuoma and Vigtyr and Me
The Batty has Landed
Vesturbæjarlaug
Heimkoman
Imagine…
Rúntur
Cats of Reykjavík
Fimm Konur
Shitstorm in Iceland
Thinking About Iceland
Vonarstræti
portal 2 xtacy
Alda Among the Hidden People
Reading Between the Lines

2014

Advent Calendars
Sugar Mountain
Dramatic Reykjavík
The Pets
Hallgrímur's Magnificent 7%
Unraveled
The Most Dangerous Woman in Icelandic Music?
The Whispering Muse
Alda on Performing Arts
Reykjavík by Bicycle
Doing the Math
Imagine 2014


2013

88
Samaris—Promise and Problems
Reykjavík By Night
The Stones Speak
Soléy at Faktorý
Iceland for Night-Owls
May Media Madness
Quiet Revolution
Two Women in the Dark
Do Not Underestimate
Patio Conversation


2012

Samaris
Ghost Suburb
No Photos Please!
Iceland Airwaves - 2012
The Future of Hope
From the Mouth of the Whale
The Blue Fox
Aldrei fór ég Suður
A History of Iceland

2011

Reverse Viking
Devil's Island
Full Circle
Convergence- Jar City, Geonomics, Under the Glacier
My Soul to Take
Under the Glacier
Mama Gógó
A History of Icelandic Literature
Interview
Eva and the Devil's Servant
Biophilia
Pascal Pinon on Parade!
Nordic Fashion Bash
Webcam Winter Wonderland

2010

Girl Group
The Icelandic Issue
Honour of the House
McSweeney's
Skólavörðustígur
Nordic House
Fríkirkjan
Pictures from the Past I
Pictures from the Past II
Siggi Ármann
Fan Letter
Cosmic Call


2009

Airwaves
Mals og Menningar
The Corner Kitchen
Frida in Iceland
Guð Blessi Ísland
Batty's Saga - I
Batty's Saga - II
Batty's Saga - III
Batty's Saga - IV
Iceland at the Crossroads
The Sea


2008

Jacobinarina
Búðir
Finding the Keys
Midnight Serenade
Windows of Brimness
Dreaming of Iceland
What You Can Do
Early Laxness
Icelandic Cinema
Parenthetical Sigur Rós
Sigur Rós and Heima


2007

Alex on Icelandic Music
Voices
Tickle Me Emo
Collectively Speaking
Halldór Laxness Top Ten
Björk's Top Ten
Volta
Jóhann Jóhannsson
Breakfast
Burning Down the House
Amiina in concert
Glacier


2006

A Most Charming Witch
A Piece of Iceland
High drama with Auður and Ibsen
An Evening in Sirkus
Water
Kaffi with Kristín
Brekkukotsannáll
Spying on the Russians
Midnight in Reykjavík
Another Night Scene
Drawing Restraint 9
Unravel
Hyperballad


2005

Dís and Cold Light
The First Time
Brave Little Yaris
The Parade
Dreamscape
...“It's not up to you… ”
Sigur Rós and Amiina in concert
Interview


2004

Three Women at Nauthólsvík
Kolaportið
Þjóðleikhúsið
Snow White
Nauthól Revisited
Adventures in Auto Rentals
The Flight Home
Swim Date
On Bolstaðarhlið
Má Mí Mó
Encounter with the Merchant Prince

By Professor Batty


Monday, November 01, 2010

End of the Line?

Since starting this mess in April of 2004, it seems that I'm always saying goodbye. Bloggers just come and go- and blogging "relationships" have always been more like a pleasant chat with a stranger than a long-term commitment with a dear friend. That said, and although I had premonitions of its coming, the news of the recent decision of Alda Sigmundsdóttir to end her excellent blog The Iceland Weather Report was received here with sadness.

It may not be the end of the line as far as my interest in Icelandic bloggers goes, but it is truly the end of an era. Hers was the most informative, authoritative, and unquestionably the best blog from Iceland written in English. The site, along with its forum, will remain up, but her almost daily reports on a vast panorama of Icelandic topics will cease. This will be a big hole in my blog-world, while there are many good niche-sites about Iceland, and good personal ones, none of them (and indeed no blogs I read anywhere) could convey a person's life in its geo-socio-political contexts as well as Alda could.

I can understand why she's quit- she is an active professional, with family and other personal obligations, as well having to deal with the overall downturn in the Icelandic economy (as well as the comments of crack-pots!) It also seems pretty evident why she has kept it going as long as she did- she really loves Iceland, its people and culture, and that she thought that the rest of the world could appreciate it as well. It has been a rough couple of years for Iceland. Alda has been there through the worst of it, sparing nothing, she must be exhausted.

I certainly did appreciate her efforts; it was the only blog I've supported with monetary contributions, and it was always the first Icelandic blog I recommended to people interested in traveling to Iceland. It was also the only blog where I dropped my Professor Batty moniker and used my real name when commenting.

So. What else can I say? There is nothing, nothing except "thank you."

By Professor Batty


Comments: 1 


Tuesday, May 11, 2010

New Icelandic Author!



Just purchased Alda Sigmundsdóttir's new e-book, Living Inside The Meltdown, a collection of her interviews with people who have been affected by Iceland's ongoing financial crisis, sometimes referred to as the Kreppa. Alda's interview style is invisible, she lets the people speak for themselves, giving the reader a very personal view of how their lives have been changed. This is an extremely sensitive subject for the normally taciturn Icelanders to deal with, much less speak openly about. The thoughts of Haraldur Sigurðsson, a police officer, are almost unbearably heart-breaking in their sadness and candor. Tryggvi Hannesson, a 75 year old veteran of many prior Icelandic fiscal calamities, lets fly with a lengthy tirade, most of which I suspect is 100% accurate.

The others in the book have been and are being affected in different ways, but not without a few glimmers of hope- a return to more basic values, less materialism (or perhaps that's just a rationalization for not having money to spend) and more openness in what has been a very closed society.

You can order Alda's book through her website, The Iceland Weather Report. Her blog has been the best English language Icelandic website for many years; she has been my inspiration since 2004.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Monday, June 08, 2015

Thinking About Iceland



Now it begins.

Again.

The long countdown to my return to Iceland. My infatuation for ‘The Rock’ had faded in recent months, but has recently been rekindled, not in the least part by the efforts of the triumvirate of the ‘three sisters’ of Icelandic Internet Information: Alda, Auður and Maria.

Alda is well on her way to becoming the printed authority on Icelandic Culture. Her ever-expanding series of books, both fact and fiction, is threatening to overwhelm all other Icelanders who write for foreign readers. Although she now usually uses Facebook to communicate, her original blog is still active, with longer posts about once a week.

Maria’s Iceland Eyes is still going as well. More personal than Alda’s blog, it features her ruminations on what it means to live in Iceland. Low-key yet heartfelt, it is the internet equivalent of having coffee with an old friend.
 
Finally, read Auður’s heartfelt post about her relationship with her blog, her family, dealing with tourists and, of course, Iceland. She is a national treasure.

Update: Expatriate Larissa Kyzer has emerged from her immersion in Icelandic linguistic studies to resume posting on the Eth & Thorn blog again. Her current post contains links to PRI podcasts on the Icelandic language. In two parts, they constitute an excellent overview of the the tradition and future of Icelandic.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 2 


Monday, March 31, 2014

Alda on Performing Arts in Iceland


Harpa, Reykjavík, 2012

I've been a fan of the Icelandic performing arts for years and this short essay about a new Icelandic opera  (taken from Alda Sigmundsdóttir's Facebook page, 30 March 2014) eloquently sums up my impressions and then some:

Last night we went to see a new Icelandic opera called Ragnheiður, which has been getting rave reviews. Critics have literally been falling all over themselves with rapture. So I confess I was more than a little curious to see it, though not without apprehension, since I'm not a big opera fan and find few things worse than sitting through a lengthy theatrical performance when I'm bored out of my wits.
 

But the production totally lived up to the hype. And sitting there in the dark I had some thoughts.
 

1. Not for the first time I was filled with awe that this tiny nation - 320,000 people - are able to put on a production of such remarkable quality. We went to a Broadway show last summer that was substantially inferior to this. And this is not a one-off. Pretty much every theatrical production you see here in the professional theatres is of such a standard. It completely defies all logic.

2. It was brought home to me how essential the arts are to a nation's identity. This opera is about a very dramatic event in Iceland's history, and it is performed in Icelandic. Sitting in the audience you could FEEL the concentrated attention of all the people watching who connected on a very profound level with all that was going on. It spoke to them - to us. Granted, it would have spoken to anyone - the emotions, occurrences etc. were common to all humanity - but the context, clothing, setting, language, etc. were OURS. And people were crying all around me. Practically sobbing. I have never experienced that at the theatre before. In tear-jerk movies, yes, but never at the theatre.

3. I marvelled at the fact that certain political forces believe that the arts are a luxury, and pretty unimportant in the grand scheme of things. They are not. Performances like the one I saw last night are the glue that hold a nation together. They nourish the finer sensibilities, like compassion, empathy and love, and they foster a sense of unity. They promote a healthy society, and any politician who does not see the value of that is seriously stupid. 

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Monday, April 25, 2016

Mondays in Iceland - #59

The Little Book of Icelandic

by Alda Sigmundsdóttir

Yet another book was recently published by a blog-pal—the second in the same week!

Alda Sigmundsdóttir has created a mini-publishing empire with her books on Icelandic culture. Her latest is, like her other ones, quirky and hilarious. It is available on Amazon, and should be in most of the usual Icelandic outlets by now.  You can check them all out on her website.

I was engrossed, although perhaps not quite as much as the fellow on the cover was! Like Shoshanah's book, I was fortunate to have a small role in this book's genesis—I was a beta reader. It was perhaps the most fun I've ever had while "working."

Last October, when I was in Reykjavík, I saw her other books on display all over the city. This series of books is an excellent introduction to the wonderful Icelandic culture.  Some of her books have been translated into Dutch, French, Spanish, and German as well:

By Professor Batty


Comments: 2 


Monday, July 08, 2019

Alda's Iceland Update



From long-time FITK correspondent Alda Sigmundsdóttir comes this radio interview (produced by RÚV English) wherein she discusses the country’s current issues including cessation of whaling, housing, and the current tourism downturn and the recession that has occurred.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Monday, June 29, 2009

Mondays In Iceland - #8


Krýsuvík, 2006

Inspiration for this week's post comes from Alda Kalda, our fearless Icelandic corespondent who went hiking in active earthquake country. The Reykjanesfólkvangur is a national park just east of Keflavík and the international airport. My trek through it was taken during an intermittent squall inside a tiny rental Toyota Yaris. This is a fantastic place, full of mossy lava formations and hot springs. The water in the picture above is boiling hot. Every so often a foolish tourist will step through the crust and get severely scalded. There are plenty of places to hike without fear, as Alda's pictures show. If it weren't so tectonically hot, I'd say "way cool..."


By Professor Batty


Comments: 4 


Thursday, June 17, 2010

Leaks...

A recent issue of The New Yorker has an article about an Australian man named Julian Paul Assange and the "organization" he belongs to called WikiLeaks. WikiLeaks was set up to expose secrets about immoral government and business activities. This is a very hot-button issue with the Obama administration, and there are reports that The Pentagon is actively seeking him in an attempt to prevent the release of diplomatic cables and further videos of purported U.S. war atrocities in Iraq and Afghanistan.

More on this subject can be found here on Alda's excellent blog, The Iceland Weather Report, including her video of Assange discussing the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (recently made into law in Iceland) whose intent is to safeguard whistle-blowers and related internet and journalism freedoms.

This WikiLeaks thing is going to be BIG, as big as The Pentagon Papers were in the 70's...

UPDATE: Alda's interview is now on ABC news...

By Professor Batty


Comments: 1 


Monday, January 05, 2009

The Weblog Awards

...or, THE BLOGGIES! Nominations are now open, you can nominate your favorite weblog in a variety of categories from now until next Monday. If you have a favorite that you'd like to see get some more exposure, check out their website for all the info (the site scrolls sideways.)

While we are on the topic of favorite blogs, Alda at The Iceland Weather Report has been exemplary in her coverage of the current situation in Iceland. Be sure to check her most excellent post about a protest last Saturday. In addition to her fine writing she has included a short video clip of an eight-year-old girl delivering a fiery speech.

You will not find that depth of coverage on the MSM.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 3 


Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Pop-Ups

Mark Zuckerberg is getting more aggressive in his plan for Facebook's world domination. Sites I could visit last month with out interference are now obscured by pop-ups, ala Pinterest style.

Alda's Iceland Weather Report is blocked for non-FB viewers:




My old buddy Rich's Facebook page for his band is now obscured as well:



Even the naughty pleasure, Classical Art Memes, is blocked:



So long FB sites! Oh, and Mr Zuckerberg—thanks for being an asshole!

UPDATE: So as of May 18th, they are not visible. Maybe my grousing paid off?

NEW UPDATE: As of May 26th they are back. 

By Professor Batty


Comments: 1 


Monday, February 01, 2010

Re-Scan



After losing a few channels, I remembered that the Sunday before the Superbowl is "Re-scan day" for those of us lesser mortals who have to scrape by on broadcast TV only. For 60 years broadcast television had the same channels, I've had to reprogram my converter three times in the last 2 years!

At any rate, I did the deed (although I still haven't deleted the bible channels) and went through all the stations to make sure I didn't miss any. The Grammys were on and I happened to tune in to catch the end of Beyoncé's bump 'n grind routine she did while surrounded by storm troopers! Okay, now I remember why I don't usually watch that show.

Not much else was on, so I checked out Alda's Iceland Weather Report blog. She had a couple of very interesting links to an Icelandic TV show with an interview (in English) with Max Keiser, an independent economic analyst and writer. Anyone interested in the world banking situation should take a look, you may not agree with everything Mr. Keiser says, but even if he isn't 100% correct, what remains will make you shudder.

You'll never see this on American TV, no matter how many times you "re-scan."

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Sunday, May 03, 2020

My Own Private Iceland #5

This is the fifth in a series of posts imagining what my scheduled trip to Iceland would have been like…



O.K., I'll admit that this post might be stretching the concept of my “fantasy island” trip too far. But, if I am allowed to have an fictional travelog, why not include a night spent in Harpa in the company of Eivør, the Faroese (not quite Icelandic but close and she is immensely popular there) performer.

I don’t think anything I can write can compare to the vitality expressed in the image presented above, so I’ll let her ‘speak’ for herself:



BONUS: BBC article about þetta reddast featuring Alda and Audur…

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Sunday, June 01, 2014

Milestone



Any excuse for a party.

This blog is “officially” ten years old today (actually it started in April, 2004, but those early experiments have long been deleted.) With over two thousand original posts by yours truly along with dozens of contributions by others and reposts. As my late mother used to say to me: “What's the matter with you?” I had no answer then, nor will I offer one now.

While I can’t guarantee another ten years, I will do all I can to finish the serial fiction. In the mean time, who knows?  Revisiting the neglected Flippist Archives for sure.  Another visit to Iceland (in the summer of 2015) is looking likely. I will definitely be in the Mt. Horeb area this fall, and a jaunt to the BWCAW isn’t out of the question for this summer, either.

Thanks for the support! Everyone who has contributed, commented and even visited Flippist World Headquarters (tours available!) has expanded my world immeasurably. I've enjoyed reading all the books published by the bloggers I have been following: Annie Atkins' To the Left of the Midwest, Maria Alva Roff's 88, Shoshanah's (Ex)hausted, and several titles by Alda Sigmondsdóttir. Look for a review of her novel Unraveled Wednesday.

And, finally, here's a big 'takk' to Auður. Without her initial (and continuing) inspiration there would have never been a Flippism is the Key. 


By Professor Batty


Comments: 5 


Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Year-end Wrap Up

2022 is nearly over.

Good riddance to bad rubbish? Or are there gems to be found in this landfill of a year?

The big story in 2022 is the same as the big story of 2020 and 2021 - Covid. It finally caught up with me (“I went to Iceland and all I brought home was a case of Covid”) and although I was over it in a week, the lingering effects of an ear infection induced deafness lasted over a month, the Weaver also succumbed to the virus. It was a time span which coincided with the birth of our first grandson (premature and is still in hospital). November was not a fun time at Flippist World Headquarters. 2022 was also the pits from a monetary standpoint—but I find it amusing that a 0.1% bank savings account rate outperformed my carefully-curated IRA investments over the last two years. In other bummer news from 2022: World War III started.

Moving on from that bleakness, in the words of Monty Python, let us “Look on the Bright Side of Life.” The Weaver and I did manage to get out of the house this year, to California in March, Seattle in April, and we made a return visit to Mineral Point, Wisconsin. All of this travel led up to my eighth trip to Iceland, a trip that was extremely intense (except for the time spent lolling in the hot pots at the swimming pool.) Was it worth a case of Covid? Is my Iceland infatuation finally over? I’ll be exploring that question in depth in the coming months (big announcement Sunday).

Flippist World Headquarters, December 2012:
Looking back as I enter the 19th year of Flippism is the Key (a quarter of my life!), I find that it has been a long, strange trip, indeed. Almost all the bloggers that I interacted with in those early years are dormant, notable exceptions are Carrie Marshall, and Alda Sigmundsdóttir, both of whom have published memoirs this year. All of the rest of the bloggers I followed in the aughts have ceased posting and only a few from ten years ago still write (Bob, Sheila, and the aforementioned Carrie. Even my long held connection to all things Icelandic, The Reykjavík Grapevine, has dropped its daily coverage. A new social media site, Post, holds some promise. I’ll be posting more music videos in the upcoming year, you can see all of them at the link in the sidebar. I’ve also been exploring the site ooh! which is dedicated to the discovery of old-school blogging—evidently there is still some life left in this archaic form of internet communication. Or is the internet is already over? Don’t get me started on GPT-3, it is humbling to think that a set of AI algorithms could replace my labored scribblings here.

Or my illustrations:
AI generated image of Minneapolis ala Vincent Van Gogh.

So here’s to 2023 and, at the risk of being made a fool, could it be any worse that 2022?

Would it make things better if I posted more cat pictures?

By Professor Batty


Comments: 2 


Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Convergence

All of the disturbing trends of the last few months have left many of us searching for answers. The failure, or rather the irrelevance, of Capitalism in light of the ongoing financial crisis has been so abstract as baffle even otherwise glib economists and commentators. Iceland has been at the forefront of this, and seems to be groomed for the role of "whipping boy" by larger and more powerful countries (i.e. the UK and the USA.) The IMF came to the "rescue" or did it really? In this excellent article by Michael Hudson, Iceland's situation and its options are clearly outlined. Far from being an isolated accident, Hudson shows how this is the direct result of a concerted effort by a group of bankers and financiers to perpetuate and expand their wealth and power. It is a long article, but clearly written. And it isn't only about Iceland, it's about how everyone in the world is being affected by these ruthless and immoral policies. The fallout from this article and interviews on Icelandic Television is growing, with the Icelandic blogosphere on fire and articles in the Huffington Post as well.

Highly recommended.

Thanks to Alda, for that and other pertinent links. You won't see this in-depth analysis in U.S. media any time soon.

By Stephen Cowdery


Comments: 0 


Monday, July 20, 2015

Loss of a Pet


Tommy, 1968

And here, my brothers and sisters, is the sad and weepy part...

A recent blog post about the death of an Icelandic cockatiel triggered in me an unexpected flood of emotions and memories about every critter with whom I've ever had the pleasure to share a roof.

Polly the cockatiel was just a bird, but I knew of her, and about her personality. Because I (and many others) had read about her she had unwittingly enriched not only her owner's life, but the lives of hundreds of others. I've had a dog, more than a few cats, and even a couple of lizards (although the reptiles weren't exactly chummy) while growing up and when our kids were young. One cat, in particular, was the closest. An ordinary tom, who moved in with us when I was about 8, who lived with me throughout my childhood and teen years, and even survived into my young adulthood. We did things together; we explored the backyard and the neighborhood (he would actually walk with me) and if I was troubled (or high) he could always tell. Still, he was just an ordinary cat, a cat whose favorite pastime was sleeping. In his old age, when he was suffering, I was the person who took him to the vet to be put down.

In this world filled with human death why is it that the loss of a pet can be so devastating? The answer was eloquently stated in the post I referred to:
... with animals, there is a complete absence of guile. They’re just whole and complete in who they are and they give of themselves unconditionally. And that is rare with people.

~Alda Sigmundsdóttir


So here's to Polly, Tommy, Skipper, Betty, Booger, Terry, Bodkay and all the other critters who have touched our lives. Love can be hard, it can be messy, it can be sad.

But it also can be perfect.




First posted 3/25/10
Re-posted, with edits, for Little Z

By Professor Batty


Comments: 3 




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