Crocodile: It’s What’s For Dinner
Bizarre, China, Cuisine, Walmart
Matt Stopera offers photos of sixteen items you’ll only find at a Walmart in China. What on earth is number 6?
From Vanderleun.
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Category Archive 'Walmart'
08 Mar 2011
Crocodile: It’s What’s For DinnerBizarre, China, Cuisine, WalmartMatt Stopera offers photos of sixteen items you’ll only find at a Walmart in China. What on earth is number 6? From Vanderleun. 09 Jan 2006
Brittle Software, Antigorai, and CultureAmazon, Apple, Ebay, Jaron Lanier, Libertarianism, Linux, Microsoft, Open Source, Oracle, Samuel Edward Konkin III, Technology, The Internet, WalmartJarod Lanier (above) writes about Technology the way certain of my college friends used to talk about these kinds of things after a couple of hash brownies. This specific (brilliant, crossing the barriers of a variety of separate and distinct topics, wildly original and speculative, and a trifle daft) form of discourse was referred to in our circles as space-ranging. Criticized by his interlocutors for his prolixity, for the profusion of his ideas, for their chaotic disorganization, and for indulging in the characteristic intellectual overreach of the seriously stoned, one Early Concentration Philosophy classmate of mine, had on a particular occasion declared memorably in his own defense: “I am a Space Ranger!” As the rings of Saturn fade distantly in the view-finder, Lanier remarks:
———————— But, as is often the case in space ranges, there is some very good stuff in here. The concept of the Antigora, i.e., a privately owned marketplace whose owner benefits both from its use by, and from the volunteer labor of, entrants is potentially quite useful. I have a strong suspicion that Lanier’s use of Agora, and variations thereon, as his preferred term for one kind of marketplace and another, stems from the influence of the late Samuel Edward Konkin III (1947-2004), founder of a unique strain of California counter-cultural Libertarianism which he called Agorism, whose theories were promulgated via Sam’s own Agorist Institute. Potlatch metaphors were also a characterististic trope of Konkinian Libertarianism. One can hear the echo of Sam Konkin’s sunny optimism in the following analysis:
———————— An amusing read and a fine provocation. John Perry Barlow, Eric S. Raymond, David Gelernter, and Glenn Reynolds will all be replying. ———————— Hat tip to Glenn Reynolds. |