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A couple updates to Words & Tricks: Tweet Digest and Comment Love

March 28th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Admin by Chris Pommier

Source: FlickrIn the interest of centralizing my online activities, and encouraging more participation in the comments section of Words & Tricks, I’ve made a couple small tweaks to the site.

First Tweak: Tweeting

Though I haven’t been able to find the time to blog regularly lately, I have found that posting to Twitter is fast and easy. I can even do it from my cell phone. So, I’ve installed the Twitter Tools WordPress plugin in order to collect my tweets each day and automatically post them as a digest, or roundup, to this blog.

This is experimental, since I don’t want to spam you, or my own blog with annoying daily messages that have little substance. After a couple weeks, please give me your feedback as to whether this feature is worth keeping.

Second Tweak: Editable comments that keep track of you

I’ve tweaked the comments section using the WP AJAX Edit Comments WordPress plugin to allow readers to edit their comments after they submit them. Misspell something? No problem! Your comment is editable for a brief time.

Also, in order to encourage commenting, please note that I installed the CommentLuv WordPress plugin. If you have a blog and enter its address in the URL field, CommentLuv will look for your RSS feed there, and pull the title of your most recent post to link to you comment.

Enjoy!

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

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And the award for comment of the week goes to…

March 10th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Opinion by Chris Pommier


Creative Commons License photo credit: [177]

In response to my last post in which I embedded a popular video by Common Craft explaining the why-would-I-bother and how-does-it-work of Twitter, Aspartaimee had this to say,

i can’t keep up with kids today. bloging and txting and ROTF, and twitter and the myfacespacebook. i feel like i need to retire to a double-wide somewhere and gnaw on cold chicken from a bucket as i yell out the window forkids to get out of my yard, don’t they know they are interrupting my stories?

Though Asparaimee isn’t yet on Twitter, she did admit that she’s seeing it everywhere lately. You can find me, and follow me, there.

Thanks, Asparatimee. The prize for winning the Comment of the Week award is my undying gratitude for reading and commenting. As well as fame and glory, such as it is.

What do you think? Enough with the social media already? Or will there never be enough ways for us to communicate with each other while we’re supposed to be working?

Finally, shouldn’t there really be something called Myfacespacebook?

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

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Opinion: Application of Humanitarian Law Not Enough to Address Global Violence

December 3rd, 2006 | 3 Comments | Posted in Uncategorized by Chris Pommier

Over at Out of the Blue, a blog written by college instructor and my friend Bluegrrrrl, she posted an intriguing article titled “Militarism vs. humanitarian law” (on her blog, scroll down to Wednesday, November 29, 200 to read it). In it she discusses Mary Kaldor’s book “Beyond Militarism, Arms Races, and Arms Control.” Kaldor is professor and Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

It’s a great post and it really gave me something to think about. I’ve posted my response here. Just a few things to think about on this bitterly cold Minnesota Sunday.

The one thing I would add to this discussion is that there doesn’t seem to be much of a focus on education and poverty in this. Perhaps because it deals primarily with militarism.

In her premise bluegrrrrl writes that Kaldor says, “contemporary warfare is driven primarily by conflicting political ideologies “ and I would have to respond that this appears to be at once an overly narrow and overly broad premise. Narrow because it seems to discount issues of poverty, education (or lack thereof), tradition, language, history and religion. Broad because, if it is meant to include all those things, then it becomes unwieldy and leads to a (perhaps) simplistic conclusion that application of international law, by itself, would be a deterrent to war/ violence.

My problem stems from the question that, after all, if one is dealing with a group who is fundamentally opposed to the rule of (western) law, what could be gained from applying it?

To me it seems as though Kaldor is still advocating a top-down mode of “squeezing” or “attacking” her opponents. Replacing violence on the battlefield with violence in the courtroom. Or, at least, the possibility of it. After all, who controls “justice” ultimately?

So, for an addendum to her model, I would turn to what I conceive as a “grassroots” model that addresses the needs of the people, offering education and addressing poverty. Most of all, I would suggest doing away with the fiction that we live in a globally competitive environment that necessitates fighting over intellectual, cultural and natural resources. In many ways the U.S.’s message to the world is “Give us your best and brightest and we will give you McDonald’s, KFC and Wal-Mart.” This is the old smallpox blanket trick on a global scale.

I’m adding my vote to what spadoman, another commenter to this post and frequent Out of the Blue reader, wrote said in a comment, “look for the circumstances that caused the crime and try to stop it from happening again.”

Don’t get me wrong, I still think Kaldor’s suggestion is preferable to Bush’s non-answer answer to violence (More vioence! How stupid). She is supporting a narrative that makes room for answers to conflict that don’t necessitate the killing of civilians or soldiers and I absolutely appreciate that.

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

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