Posts tonen met het label intelligence. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label intelligence. Alle posts tonen

maandag 20 februari 2017

Piraten zijn cool




Piraten zijn cool,  zegt mijn kleinzoon
Goed, na heel veel lees- en uitpluiswerk ga ik me dan maar eens concentreren op de Piratenpartij.

Ik heb daarvoor wel enkele voor mij geldige redenen waaronder:
Het Finse voorbeeld
Een vrouwelijke lijsttrekker
Een meer democratische democratie
Baas over eigen leven
Liquid democracy



Lees het interview in Vrij Nederland  eens door en vergelijk sommige zaken eens met de vastgeroeste werkelijkheid. Enkele opmerkingen spraken mij extra aan.

[.....Bijvoorbeeld de echtgenoot van Edith Schippers, onze minister van Volksgezondheid: die bleek als consultant geld te verdienen aan haar beleid. Over zulke zaken wil ik Kamervragen stellen.’.....]

[...Maar nieuwe methoden als Loomio maar ook liquid democracy maken directe zeggenschap van de burger tussentijds mogelijk. Volgens liquid democracy kan je je stem op bijvoorbeeld het gebied van zorg toevertrouwen aan iemand die je kent die daar veel verstand van heeft. Op die manier kan je in de democratie veel beter gebruik maken van de expertise van de burgers, en het vergroot de democratische betrokkenheid.’....]

[...En dan het gedoe over het bonnetje van Fred Teeven. Ard van der Steur is de derde VVD-bewindsman die erover is gevallen, maar Rutte lijkt er nauwelijks last van te hebben. Het verbaast me dat de verontwaardiging over de houding van de VVD niet veel groter is. Daardoor denken ze in die partij nog steeds dat ze met alles kunnen wegkomen, en.’...]


Ik heb al aardig wat verschillende partijen gestemd in mijn leven. Helaas gaan de meesten niet met de tijd mee, dulden geen inmenging of hebben te veel punten die overeenkomen met de gevestigde orde. En ze zijn vooral goed in het hanteren van partijbeschermende maatregelen.

Ik zou een partij willen die dagelijks meegaat met de gang van zaken. Die mij vertegenwoordigt in zaken die ik belangrijk vind voor de toekomst, voor mijn kinderen (uit de low-protest-generatie) en kleinkinderen die ik nog protestfähig moet maken (alleen op het gebied van de volksvertegenwoordigers).

Ik houd de Piratenpartij al jaren in de gaten. Ik snap dat Ancilla een mooie lijsttrekster is maar dan denk ik dat het ook wel een goede zet is. Ik ben niet zo'n vrouwenvrouw maar alles is beter dan de koppies van die half ingedutte mannetjes. Het zou andere partijen geen kwaad doen al die mannen eens van de eerste plaats te halen.
Tot zover deze korte overpeinzing.
Wordt hopelijk vervolgd.


©Gavi Mensch
Nederland BV 18-2-2017








zaterdag 9 november 2013

Gastblog: P.D. James' tips for Writers by Alison Feeney-Hart

I read this on the BBC site News Entertainment and Arts .
I was impressed by the useful tips of this bright lady:


P.D. James' top 10 tips for being a writer .

Although she didn't publish her first novel until she was 42, Phyllis Dorothy James had been writing since childhood.
Now a celebrated crime writer, she has penned more than 20 books, including The Children Of Men, and the Adam Dalgliesh mystery series.
At the age of 93, she says she wants to write just one more detective novel.
Here are her top 10 tips for being an author.
1. You must be born to write
You can't teach someone to know how to use words effectively and beautifully. You can help people who can write to write more effectively and you can probably teach people a lot of little tips for writing a novel, but I don't think somebody who cannot write and does not care for words can ever be made into a writer. It just is not possible.
Nobody could make me into a musician. Somebody might be able to teach me how to play the piano reasonably well after a lot of effort, but they can't make a musician out of me and you cannot make a writer, I do feel that very profoundly.
2. Write about what you know
You absolutely should write about what you know. There are all sorts of small things that you should store up and use, nothing is lost to a writer. You have to learn to stand outside of yourself. All experience, whether it is painful or whether it is happy is somehow stored up and sooner or later it's used.
I love situations where people are thrown together in unwelcome proximity. where all kinds of reprehensible emotions can bubble up. I think you must write what you feel you want to write because then the book is genuine and that comes through.
I believe that someone who can write, who has a feeling for words and knows how to use them will find a publisher. Because after all, publishers do still need to find new writers. We all get old and we die and that's that and there have to be successors.
3. Find your own routine
I think all we writers are different. It's interesting, isn't it, how different we are?
Some people have to have the room, the pen and others do everything on a computer. I write by hand and I can write more or less anywhere as long as I've got a comfortable chair, a table, an unlimited amount of biros to write with and lined paper to write on. And then the next day when my PA comes, which she does at 10 o'clock, then I've got quite a lot to dictate to her and she puts it on to the computer, prints it out and I do the first revision.
In a sense, therefore, I revise as I go. It's important to get up early - before London really wakes and the telephone calls begin and the emails pile up. This is the best time for me, the time of quiet in the morning,
4. Be aware that the business is changing
Goodness gracious, how the world of publishing has changed! It is much easier now to produce a manuscript with all the modern technology. It is probably a greater advantage now, more than ever before, to have an agent between you and the publisher.
Everything has changed and it's really quite astonishing, because people can self-publish now. I would once have thought that that was rather a self-defeating way of doing it but actually publishers do look at what is self-published and there are examples of people picking up very lucrative deals.
5. Read, write and don't daydream!
To write well, I advise people to read widely. See how people who are successful and good get their results, but don't copy them. And then you've got to write! We learn to write by writing, not by just facing an empty page and dreaming of the wonderful success we are going to have. I don't think it matters much what you use as practice, it might be a short story, it might be the beginning of a novel, or it might just be something for the local magazine, but you must write and try and improve your writing all the time. Don't think about it or talk about it, get the words down.
6. Enjoy your own company
It is undoubtedly a lonely career, but I suspect that people who find it terribly lonely are not writers. I think if you are a writer you realise how valuable the time is when you are absolutely alone with your characters in complete peace. I think it is a necessary loneliness for most writers - they wouldn't want to be always in the middle of everything having a wonderful life. I've never felt lonely as a writer, not really, but I know people do.
7. Choose a good setting
Something always sparks off a novel, of course. With me, it's always the setting. I think I have a strong response to what I think of as the 'spirit of a place'. I remember I was looking for an idea in East Anglia and standing on a very lonely stretch of beach. I shut my eyes and listened to the sound of the waves breaking over the pebble shore. Then I opened them and turned from looking at the dangerous and cold North Sea to look up and there, overshadowing this lonely stretch of beach was the great, empty, huge white outline of Sizewell nuclear power station. In that moment I knew I had a novel. It was called Devices and Desires.
8. Never go anywhere without a notebook
Never go anywhere without a notebook because you can see a face that will be exactly the right face for one of your characters, you can see place and think of the perfect words to describe it. I do that when I'm writing, I think it's a sensible thing for writers to do.
I've written little bits of my next novel, things that have occurred to me. I've got the setting already. I've got the title, I've got most of the plot and I shall start some serious writing of it next month, I think.
9. Never talk about a book before it is finished
I never talk about a book before it is finished and I never show it to anybody until it is finished and I don't show it to anybody even then, except for my publisher and my agent. Then there is this awful time until they phone.
I'm usually pretty confident by the time I've sent it in but I have those moments when I think, 'well I sent it to them on Friday, by Saturday night they should be ringing up to say how wonderful it is!'
I'm always aware that people might have preferences and think that one book is better than another.
10. Know when to stop
I am lucky to have written as many books as I have, really, and it has been a joy. With old age, it becomes very difficult. It takes longer for the inspiration to come, but the thing about being a writer is that you need to write.
What I am working on now will be another detective story, it does seem important to write one more. I think it is very important to know when to stop.
Some writers, particularly of detective fiction, have published books that they should not have published. I don't think my publisher would let me do that and I don't think my children would like me to. I hope I would know myself whether a book was worth publishing. I think while I am alive, I shall write. There will be a time to stop writing but that will probably be when I come to a stop, too.


By Alison Feeney-Hart © BBC News


I'm sure all the rights are reserved 2013


Gavi Mensch 
9-8-2013


.

maandag 16 september 2013

Let's not forget about the real beauty





As we are only miserable collections of cells, no colour, no fantasy, no possibilities and  no escape. Confined to live in ugly houses that are far too expensive. Driving the same kind of cars on the same kind of roads. We worry about getting to late, so we add 10 km dirty air per hour. 

We are unable to produce energy without poisoning our water with fracking chemicals or nuclear waste. Water that doesn't belong to Nestlé but to all living creatures on earth.

 
Photo:  ©D'May
I will get used to windmills and the solar cells on my rooftop give me warmth, energy and will help to get a cleaner world for my grandchildren. 

Don't let yourself be bullied by money-makers and landscape activists. Their water is the same as ours and we want to keep it clean. 


Maybe one day our lives will turn as colourful as everything in the underwater world.









Use your Brain!~




©Gavi Mensch
Maastricht 16-9-2013

Video's downloaded from You Tube.

Photo: ©D'May; published with permission and all rights reserved 2013