words, words, words
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If I begin to detail myself here, will you understand?
P. I am me
Q. I don't always know exactly who that is
R. I am Quaker
S. I like words and playing with them
T. I like genmaicha tea
U. I like the word napkin more than most others
V. I spend time walking my neighborhood
W. I cook rice often
X. I sleep well most every night
Y. I eat large amounts of fruit and vegetables
Z. I munch, sleep, write, create, cook, bike, watch, walk, listen, hope, learn, drink, live, breathe, touch, know, question, taste, copy, read, stare, carry, talk, dance, finger, try.
raisin@gmail.com
albums:
Magnetic Fields: 69 Love Songs
Erasure: I Say, I Say, I Say
Depeche Mode: Black Celebration
The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds
Marvin Gaye: What's Going On?
David Bowie: Hunky Dory
George Michael: Listen without Prejudice
George Gershwin: Porgy and Bess
Yo La Tengo: And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out
songs:
Wild is the Wind: Nina Simone
Come Undone: Duran Duran
Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini: Rachmaninov
My Funny Valentine: Chet Baker
Feeling Yourself Disintegrate: The Flaming Lips
This Must Be the Place: The Talking Heads
Hyperballad: Bjork
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Monday, October 13, 2003
Propaganda usually comes from loud voices, and therefore easier to detect. Presidents, senators, and other politicians often use it to their advantage and discredit. But at least ten city newspapers have recently receivedDubious Letters From GIs In Iraq. These letters are signed by soldiers in Iraq and sent back to their hometowns as editorials. They are made to look like an honest grassroots attempt to increase the public's awareness of the Iraq situation. The deception is layered as neither the contents nor the source are true. Every day, it seems, someone is pulling more wool over America's eyes, clouded as they already are. Someone is working very hard to convince us of something that we would otherwise not believe. It must be our job then, to work just as hard to find the truth for ourselves, and share it.
4:38 PM
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