From alt.slack:
[On Dec 27, 12:17 pm,
gl...@panix.com (Robert Scott Martin) wrote:
> In article <421eb5c3-2694-4322-912e-9af2f62d9...@i25g2000prd.googlegroups.com>,
>
> purple <pur...@tellurian.com> wrote:
> >Not one mention of Wyndham Lewis or Marshall McLuhan.
>
> >PLONK!!
>
> Heh. Exactly. There are a few moments where OP could easily have inserted
> a throwaway Marshall McLoo cameo, but he seems to have been too lost in
> recounting his own "neophilic" adventures to recognize them.
>
> As for the BLAST, they don't teach him here.
>
> At this rate I might sponsor a contest for rewriting it in order to
> de-plonk, as it were. Entries should use only 1995-era resources of course
> and, if possible, reconstructions of the ascii mindset: Bill Clinton on
> the throne, Norman O. Brown still alive, the Dow industrials at 5,000,
> anything above 2400 baud is impressive, ye X-Files and Babylon 5 just
> ramping up in the paranoid style.
>
> "The hallmark of the failed occultist is an unwillingness -- or lack of
> ability -- to wade through incredible amounts of apparent trash in the
> hopes of receiving just a little worthwhile information."]
My response on alt.slack:
[De-plonked!
http://deanvaladezclassroomwithoutwalls ... n-ExcerptsOne example from MM:
{Everybody at a football game is nobody simply by virtue of the fact of their deep involvement in an experience simultaneously shared by many others. In such a situation, the most famous person in the world becomes a nobody. This is a structural fact, and when considered in relation to our wired planet, where everybody is involved in everybody’s experience, this is the overwhelming backlash of reduction to nonentity – the creation of mass man. The mass man is not the vulgar or the stupid or the unthinking man, but anybody and everybody who experiences the electric situation of instant information.
Electronic man is no abstraction, but rather the existing individual in a simultaneous culture. Having had his private individuality erased anonymously, he is paranoiac and much inclined to violence, for violence is a quest for identity, seeking to discover, “Who am I?” and “What are my limits?”}
- Speech at the Conference on Management Information Systems, 1971]
Bob Dobbs