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The Terrestrial Gospel of Kazantzakis:
Inspiration for Saving the Earth
---- “Good is this earth, it suits us” -Thanasis
Maskaleris - Abstract - The terrestrial
dimension in the work of Kazantzakis, crowned by
the paeans he sang to the infinite beauty of the
earth and to the human life rooted in the soil,
is as intensely depicted as his momentous
struggle to achieve spiritual ascent. Scattered
in his writings we find innumerable passages on
the fundamental importance of the material realm
combined with his humanistic commitment to
mankind's terrestrial habitat—to live and
"flower" in it; and his spiritual growth, the
ascent, is crucially linked with and depends on
the material base.
More >>>
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Dr. Martin Luther King and the Greek classics :
By Alexandros P. Mallias - This year
will mark the 40th anniversary of the death of
Martin Luther King, Jr. His death on April 4,
1968, found my country in the midst of one of
its darkest hours, as the one year anniversary
of an oppressive military dictatorship neared.
With my fellow citizens living under military
rule and deprived of the very basic freedoms, I
was inspired by the people of Birmingham, Ala.,
of Memphis and Atlanta, who, in a most dignified
way, poured into the streets, standing up for
what was rightly theirs.
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AMY GOODMAN: NBC takes a swipe at democracy :
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One pundit called the Democratic presidential
debate in Las Vegas "a lovefest." It may well
have been, but only because the corporate
sponsor of the debate, General Electric-owned
NBC News and its cable news channel MSNBC,
rescinded its invitation to candidate Dennis
Kucinich. NBC decided earlier to invite the top
four Democratic candidates to the debate. Then
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson dropped out of
the race, which elevated Kucinich to the fourth
position.
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AMY GOODMAN: FCC
gives a Christmas gift to big media
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On
Dec. 18, the five commissioners of the Federal
Communications Commission met in Washington,
D.C., and passed, by a 3 to 2 vote, new
regulations that would allow more media
consolidation. This, despite the U.S. public's
increasing concern over the nation's media being
controlled by a few giant corporations.
Dissident FCC Commissioner Michael Copps said of
the decision: "We generously ask big media to
sit on Santa's knee, tell us what it wants for
Christmas, and then push through whatever of
these wishes are politically and practically
feasible. No test to see if anyone's been
naughty or nice. Just another big, shiny present
for the favored few who already hold an FCC
license -- and a lump of coal for the rest of
us. Happy holidays!"
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KFCF: 30-Years of Alternative Programming
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On
June 9, 1975, the following announcement was
reverberating throughout the Central Valley:
“The signal of Pacifica Radio station, KPFA in
Berkeley, can now be heard in the Central
Valley.” It was a momentous development: a radio
station that was listener-sponsored and not
influenced by corporate advertisers or
government funding. It would be the
pioneer, educational electronic media in the
Valley devoted to alternative programming with a
strong commitment to peace and justice.
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AMY GOODMAN: No recovery in sight for global
fever
----
The Nobel
Peace Prize was awarded this week, in Oslo,
Norway. Al Gore shared the prize with the
United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, which represents more than
2,500 scientists from 130 countries. The
solemn ceremony took place as the United
States is blocking meaningful progress at
the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Bali,
Indonesia, and the ....
:: -- US student loses free speech case - A former high school student has lost his case in what is the US Supreme Court's first major ruling on students' free speech rights in almost 20 years. At issue was whether ...
:: -- High Court Rules on Campaign Ads, Free Speech - The Supreme Court issued a series of rulings on Monday, deciding on issues as wide ranging as campaign advertising and free speech to separation of church and state and the environment. The court said ordinary ...