Kansas schoolkids stand up to hate

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Christian psychopath Fred Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church turned up at Shawnee Mission East High School in Prairie Village, Kansas, last week, hoping to spend a day with his hate-addled family harassing the populace with their wretched slogans. The Phelps’s are used to receiving a vigorous response at many of their assemblies, especially when they try and picket the funerals of soldiers killed overseas. But even they must have been surprised when the entire school turned out with their own placards and slogans repudiating the anti-gay venom which is the only message the Westboro Baptist Church has to give to the world.

Their message didn’t sit well with many students at the high school where, according to student Jake Davidson, there is a Gay and Straight Alliance at the school and students elected a homecoming king in 2007 who was openly gay.

“Everyone is equal whether you’re gay or straight,” said Davidson, a 16-year-old junior from Leawood and an organizer of the student protest.

“It’s really cool that everyone wants to be involved and take a stand against this. It doesn’t surprise me that everyone wants to help out.” (More.)

See that, Fred? That’s the future, and it’s laughing at you because you look ridiculous.

WEEDEATER by Nance Klehm

WEEDEATER
by Nance Klehm for arthurmag.com (“homegrown counterculture”)

Dear Nance:
It’s butt-ass cold outside. What can I do *right now*, inside my home, to move our home and lives closer to an appropriate way of being a human on this planet?
-Anonymous Northerner

Dear Nance:
The holidays are over, it’s the New Year, and I don’t know what I’m doing with my life. I think I may be approaching a full-blown Spiritual Emergency. How can I calm down without going on pharmaceuticals?
–Increasingly Nervous Nelly, Jamaica Plains, New York

Nance Klehm says:

Sounds like both of you are talking about feeling potentiality – the first of you feels you’re at the base of a big hill. The other of you is feeling that you are at the top of that hill looking out and figuring out which way to roll down.

I could suggest to start composting your own crap, write someone an ink and paper letter, get to know the trees on the way to work, sing your personal aria while riding your bike, cook a meal with a neighbor, give your lap to a cat… And those are all great things to do, but I actually have further questions for you both.

Do you ask yourself this question on a sunny day in June? How are you relating to your socio-biological environment? What is your conscious intent? What do you consider “human”?

To ‘know that’ is not necessarily to ‘know how’ which is another way of saying that a good theoretician can be a poor practitioner. Practice proceeds from the theory of it. Heck, what are you doing right now to connect to the larger picture you are a part of?

So you have the option to jump now, scroll down to a simple answer or read on for a story about someone I recently met. (Hoobaby! So many choices!)

I had spent the train ride home with my eyes closed planning my 100 FOLKS CRYING IN PUBLIC action (stay tuned, details later) after I was forcibly told to “calm down” by a security officer in a public building. I had been on the pay phone for over 40 minutes talking to one taciturn civil servant after another. I kept getting disconnected and having to wander around the milling public asking if anyone could break my singles for change to begin again. I wanted to scream and the effort to hold it back was immense so I had started crying. When I ignored him, he summoned two other guards and they stood by at arm length just in case anything escalated as I continued on my phone calls. Was it really so interesting or spectacular that you had to call your friends to watch? How many years are we away from a police state? Would it take three men to successfully restrain a frustrated woman? Maybe.

ANNOUNCEMENT: Emotional displays in public spaces can be seen as cause for alarm by authorities.

Now back to the story… I left the train station and hit the icy sidewalk. A scrapper with a mother lode of over-sized, odd-shaped metal bits all stuffed and tied onto a shopping cart clattered up the middle of the street. He looked young, small, his non-pulling arm was swinging clockwork crazy propelling him forward. Hope flew from my chest. I yelled, ‘Right on!’ and he turned and grinned at me and kept going. I started jogging in the slush to keep pace with him.

On the other side of the underpass, he hit a hill. He was straining, his free arm windmilling, his body low to the ground. I stopped dead and the other me asked me, “What the hell are you doing, Nance?!” and I stumbled over the waist high wedge of dirty snow, joined him at the center line and started pushing that cart. At the next stoplight, I moved to the front, imagining myself as the second horse. That’s when I realized that he was a she. “My name is Nini and I want to tell you, this ain’t no dog-eat-dog world,” she said. “People think it is, but it ain’t.” Then the light changed. The cart was heavy and we were breathing the cold air in deeply. Cars from both directions honked and swerved past. A perpetually sour neighbor of mine sped passed, her face screwed tight. “That’s my neighbor” I said. And Nini and I laughed.

I left Nini off at 25th street. She had three blocks to the scrapyard. She was going to make it there before it closed.

And if you haven’t figured it out already, my answer is: Get on the ground and join hands and hearts with the brave.

Questions for Nance:
editor@arthurmag.com

Nance Klehm website:
spontaneousvegetation.net

Recommended by a very happening guy in the neighborhood…

I love this strategy to live well, cheaply:

Have a person who knows stuff do a collective bulk buy on the best stuff, crafted by the best people, on behalf of a community.

For example, with this purchase of five gallons of super-premium coconut oil, 20 people can get a quart each for $12.50. All each person needs is a mason jar to pack it into…

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Coconut Oil, Extra Virgin, Certified Organic, Centrifuge Extracted, 5 gallons

The info from the maker, Wilderness Family Naturals:

HOW OUR CERTIFIED ORGANIC CENTRIFUGED COCONUT OIL IS MADE
Our Centrifuged Coconut Oil is USDA Certified Organic by ICS (Internation Certification Services). It is made from fresh coconuts that are shelled, chopped and then gently expeller pressed. The temperatures of the coconut flesh and the resulting coconut milk emulsion are carefully monitored to insure they do not exceed 25° C or 78.8° F (room temperature). Once the coconut is shelled, it takes less than 45 minutes to produce the milk. The resulting coconut milk emulsion is then chilled slightly to 10° C (50° F) so that the oil will “pull out of solution” and separate. Next, the cooled milk, by use of a large centrifuge, is separated into a pure oil and a “skim” coconut milk. the milk is discarded and the oil is placed in drums for shipment to the US. The centrifuge works like a cream separator used for separating cream from cow’s milk. It requires quite a few passes through this chilled centrifuge to obtain pure oil, but the result is absolutely fabulous.

TASTE TESTING
In performing blindfolded taste tests with a selected panel, we have now sampled over 50 different virgin coconut oils here at Wilderness Family Naturals. We initially sold a Traditional Philippine virgin coconut oil made by fermentation, then we sold a South Pacific virgin coconut oil (DME, direct microexpeller) . We have also sold certrifuged coconuts from other sources. Through the years, we have discontinued carrying these oils after finding new virgin coconut oils of higher quality. We always like to know which oils come out the winner in blindfolded taste-tests. In addition, we look at laboratory analysis data and certificates of analysis on every oil submitted to us. It is our desire to only carry the highest quality virgin coconut oils, with the longest shelf life and purest taste.

Our current centrifuged, virgin coconut oil is creamy and smooth when it is in a semi-solid state. It is completely clear like spring water when it is in a liquid state. It is pure white when it is in a solid state. It has a very mild, light coconut taste. This oil consistently rates number one every time it is taste-tested. However, our Cold-Pressed Virgin Coconut Oil now rivals it. The main difference between the two oils is taste/flavor with the Cold-Pressed Virgin Coconut oil having more of a sweet coconut flavor. Those who eat coconut oil raw or in raw treats may prefer the Cold Pressed Virgin Coconut oil. Those who use coconut oil in a variety of applications for cooking may want a milder coconut flavor and prefer the Centrifuged oil. They are both wonderfully delicious oils.

ELFWORLD: You may already live there…

A piece by Tom and Barbara (Elfworld) now available on their Etsy page…

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Their description…

“Floating baskets” 36.5″x48″
A truly collaborative piece by Tom and Barbara inspired by Britta water filters? No really, this painting is inspired by quilted textile designs, basketry and the motorcycle riders of Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.

Tom and Barbara have a show on right now at Space 1026 in Philadelphia. Here’s the promo text…

Elf World: Inneractive Apiecolypse

1026 Arch Street (2nd Floor)
Philadelphia PA 19107
Opening February 6th, 2009 7-10pm
show runs through February 28th

Nomadic peoples pulled by yaks and holding candy colored machine guns. Skulls of past histories hold secrets of future breaths. Pie, cake, tea, food for the spirits. New visions in an ancient mind. Natural blessings in artificial spaces, welcome to the Tree Cafe.

Sweetness reins as the colors engulf the soul. Sadness take hold of a still installation representing the presence of peoples hanging onto dreams of natural worlds. Community gathers to nourish the holes of torn dreams and sweet hearts.

Sugar cakes and fruit tarts washed down with a cup of hot tea is sure to appease the gods and grant us forgiveness from our ancestors. Come join us in mind, body and spirit in the beginning of a new age.

Tom and Barbara have been living in Bedford Stuyvesant, NY for the past seven years. Barbara enjoys making one of a kind garments for her company, Bobbi Clothes, making music with the experimental group, Animental, and hanging out in parks with Jimmy, the dog. Tom enjoys fishing, reading Native American poetry as well as playing music with theusaisamonster and Elvish Presley. This is Barbara and Tom’s second collaborative art show. The first being, New Wijiji, New Age Frontier shown at Mountain Fold gallery (mfoldgallery.com) in September. 2008.

Please check out our etsy site, www.elfworld.etsy.com!

And here’s another painting available from their Etsy page…

kindling

“Kindling the frontier fire”
acrylic on canvas 36″x27″

This painting was created while living in the woods in upstate NY. We were lucky enough to set up our studio in a large tent on a friends land.
This painting depicts life on the New Age frontier highly recommended for those inspired by firelight.

DAILY MAGPIE – Sunday, Feburary 8 at Family in LA: Silkscreened Posters + Vibes

from our friends at FAMILY:

Come to the opening of Boom! A silk-screened poster show at Family featuring:

Misaki Kawai
Shara Hughes
Hisham Bharoocha

Denise Kupferschmidt
Patrick Walsh III

David Aron

Espen Friberg
Brooke Inman
Ryan Waller
Adam Kaufman
Ted McGrath
Maryam Nassirzadeh
Anna Lowe Gustavi
Holly Stevenson

Family is proud to present Boom, an exhibition of two color silkscreen prints by artists from Europe and the US. The prints are deftly hand silkscreened, the two-color limit lending to experiments with multi-colored pulls, varnishes, and neons. Produced at the Lower East Side Printshop in the tradition of Barbara Kruger and Kara Walker.

The opening will include the debut performance of Vibes (members of Pocahaunted and Robedoor).

You may know Holly Stevenson from her book of drawings, Mexican Love Story, published by Nieves.

More images at the Family events blog.

DAILY MAGPIE – First Saturday of the Month – YO DOO at The Cake Shop

Hear ye, hear ye! As the saying goes, “Our shop is your shop” at YO DOO, a new record/comic/small press/art fair happening EVERY MONTH on the first Saturday of the month at The Cake Shop. The fair’s organizers are currently looking for people who wish to sell their wares (record labels, self-publishers, comic book artists, printmakers and crafters of all kinds). Your ship of opportunity has arrived – jump on! The fair lasts all day, followed by live music and a party after night falls.

Date & Time: First Saturday of every month, Noon – 7pm
Venue: The Cake Shop
Location: 152 Ludlow St. (N.Y.)
Price: Free

For more info on renting a seller’s table, visit http://myspace.com/yodoonyc

R.I.P. LUX INTERIOR

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Above: A clip of The Cramps performing at California’s Napa State Mental Hospital. Yes, this really happened.

Andy Giles points out that the Chunklet guys have posted mp3s of the Cramps’ “Ohio demo”…

Here’s the Feb 4, 2009 Statement from publicist:

Lux Interior, lead singer of The Cramps, passed away this morning due to an existing heart condition at Glendale Memorial Hospital in Glendale, California at 4:30 AM PST today. Lux has been an inspiration and influence to millions of artists and fans around the world. He and wife Poison Ivy’s contributions with The Cramps have had an immeasurable impact on modern music.

The Cramps emerged from the original New York punk scene of CBGB and Max’s Kansas City, with a singular sound and iconography. Their distinct take on rockabilly and surf along with their midnight movie imagery reminded us all just how exciting, dangerous, vital and sexy rock and roll should be and has spawned entire subcultures. Lux was a fearless frontman who transformed every stage he stepped on into a place of passion, abandon, and true freedom. He is a rare icon who will be missed dearly.

The family requests that you respect their privacy during this difficult time.

Lyrics to The Cramps’ “Garbageman”:

you ain’t no punk, you punk
you wanna talk about the real junk?
if I ever slip, I’ll be banned
cuz I’m your garbageman

well you can’t dig me you can’t dig nothin’
do you want the real thing, or are you just talkin’?
do you understand?
I’m your garbageman

yeah, somethin’ from the garage and down the driveway
now get outta your mind and get outta my way
now do you understand?
do you understand?

louie, louie, louie, lou-i
the bird’s the word and do you know why?
you gotta beat it with a stick
you gotta beat it ’til it’s thick
you gotta live until you’re dead
you gotta rock ’til you see red
now do you understand?
do you understand?
I’m a garbageman

aw, jump on and ride

yeah it’s just what you need when you’re down in the dumps
one half hillbilly and one half punk
big long legs and one big mouth
the hottest thing from the north to come out of the south
do you understand?
do you understand?

woo, I can’t lose with the stuff I use,
and you don’t choose no substitutes
so stick out your can
cuz I’m your garbageman

now do you understand?
do you understand?
do you understand?
all right, hop off

DAILY MAGPIE – Feb 7 – Sauce on The Side at Lumenhouse Gallery, Brooklyn

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Intrepid Arthur Intern Camilla Padgitt-Coles didn’t want to shamelessly promote herself on the blog, but i will.

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Sauce on the Side opens Saturday the 7th at Lumenhouse in Bushwick, Brooklyn with a free opening reception from 6-9pm.  The exhibit features work by Padgitt-Coles, Tony Luib and Zaun Lee.

Take a walk through the blowing black plastic bags and trash of Bushwick, where strange things await behind rusty metal doors.  Lumenhouse is at 47 Beaver St, by the Flushing stop of the J,M train.

2009 LUNAR CALENDAR

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“hand pulled silkscreen… numbered edition of 555… phosphorescent ink illuminates in darkness.” It’s the size of two record album covers and it’s a beaut. Calendar printer Jeremy Rendina still has a few more to sell. Just click on the image above to go to his site…