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<center xmlns:ug="http://UnwelcomeGuests.net/"><br/>For a text searchable page, try the '''[[Episode Index| ⚡ Episode Index]]'''<br/> | <center xmlns:ug="http://UnwelcomeGuests.net/"><br/>For a text searchable page, try the '''[[Episode Index| ⚡ Episode Index]]'''<br/> | ||
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| {{thumbnail |number=743 |title=Abandoning Wage Slavery |subtitle=And The Illusion of Social Power|alt=#743 Abandoning Wage Slavery - (And The Illusion of Social Power) We return to look more closely at a topic which has long been of central importance to the show - the corrupting influence of the modern money system. Specifically, what are the problems of telling people not that if they wish to eat, they must work, but that they must have a paid job. For inspiration we relisten to Ivan Illich from episode #523 in which he predicts an end to social power. In the first hour, Robin expands on what this might mean in the arena of money, using his insights from his 18 years in Bangladesh. In the second year, we hear an adaptation of a film about the global movement towards a universal income, followed up a longer section of the original Illich quote.}} | | {{thumbnail |number=743 |title=Abandoning Wage Slavery |subtitle=And The Illusion of Social Power|alt=#743 Abandoning Wage Slavery - (And The Illusion of Social Power) We return to look more closely at a topic which has long been of central importance to the show - the corrupting influence of the modern money system. Specifically, what are the problems of telling people not that if they wish to eat, they must work, but that they must have a paid job. For inspiration we relisten to Ivan Illich from episode #523 in which he predicts an end to social power. In the first hour, Robin expands on what this might mean in the arena of money, using his insights from his 18 years in Bangladesh. In the second year, we hear an adaptation of a film about the global movement towards a universal income, followed up a longer section of the original Illich quote.}} | ||
| {{thumbnail |number=744 |title=The Machine Stops |subtitle=Three Wise Men on The Implications of Human Stabulation|alt=#744 The Machine Stops - (Three Wise Men on The Implications of Human Stabulation) This episode is a successor show to episode 639, which examined the connections between technology and totalitarianism. Exceptionally, our title piece is an short story so old as to be no longer under copyright! As a counterpoint to this vintage sci-fi, two other interesting thinkers: a 1974 recording of Ivan Illich on the dangers of mechanising food production while a dependent population are stabulated (housed) in sterile concrete, followed by an introduction to the outrageous ideas of the psychonaut John C. Lilly in particular his dystopian vision of the Solid State Entity.}} | | {{thumbnail |number=744 |title=The Machine Stops |subtitle=Three Wise Men on The Implications of Human Stabulation|alt=#744 The Machine Stops - (Three Wise Men on The Implications of Human Stabulation) This episode is a successor show to episode 639, which examined the connections between technology and totalitarianism. Exceptionally, our title piece is an short story so old as to be no longer under copyright! As a counterpoint to this vintage sci-fi, two other interesting thinkers: a 1974 recording of Ivan Illich on the dangers of mechanising food production while a dependent population are stabulated (housed) in sterile concrete, followed by an introduction to the outrageous ideas of the psychonaut John C. Lilly in particular his dystopian vision of the Solid State Entity.}} | ||
− | | | + | | {{thumbnail |number=745 |title=The Hall Of Mirrors |subtitle=John Taylor Gatto Special|alt=#745 The Hall Of Mirrors - (John Taylor Gatto Special) John Taylor Gatto has contributed a lot to this show, perhaps more in terms of episodes than anyone else. Nevertheless, I'm giving another show over to him, since this speech, The Hall Of Mirrors, is such an excellent summary of the predicament of the United States of America - a nation which for generations has been attempting - not without success - to indoctrinate each new generation to greater heights of dependency upon the corporate system. This speech, from about 2009, really pulls it together, and gives a great historical perspective.}} |
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Revision as of 13:02, 11 December 2016
For a text searchable page, try the ⚡ Episode Index
For a text searchable page, try the ⚡ Episode Index