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We LOVE to hear from you! Glad you're taking the time to be part of the commentary of The World's Magazine.

Below you'll find the latest letters from YOU.

Kudos, brickbats, spam, you'll find it all right here. Who knew so many people could even find this Web magazine?

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From our Mailbag 01/05/02 - 01/20/02

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E-MAILS FROM YOU

From Austin R. (No City Provided,) CANADA:

SUBJECT: Ground Zero Fifty Years Later

Dear Rod Amis;

Just read you article on the future as post human. Find it very interesting. Especially oddly enough the paragraph on smart cards. Have been working on an article on that topic over the last few weeks. I put in "dreaming the future" and your article came up of the same name came up. I have been writing a series of pieces with the same theme. One such that you might find interesting was publishing in The Star .

Cheers,
Austin R


Easter Egg Hunt
WAIT! Could this be the notorious g21 easter egg? (High-speed connection Recommended. 2.3 MB download.)
ROD RESPONDS: Austin,

Thanks for writing and for sharing your article with me. It's a very hope-filled version of the future WTC site you present. It would be nice if you were correct.

Quite surprised anyone reads my older articles anymore, so you made my day.

Cheers!
Rod


From Darhl S., Tampa Bay, FL, USA:

Subject: Yep, no doubt about it

This week's GH proves that you have one (and more) novels in you! Good piece of writing.


From Mike B., Los Angeles, CA, USA:

Subject: color wall

Hey. I'm writing from the band Color Wall. You may have seen us open for U2 if you were lucky enough to catch the Elevation tour. I noticed you were a fan of cool music and was wondering if you could help us pick which song should be our first single off of our new CD called 'Blue.' There's real audios and mp3s at www.colorwall.com

We'd love to hear back from you.


ROD RESPONDS: Hi!

Thanks for visiting G21 and for writing! I'm on deadline for the next edition right now, but if you give me until Tuesday evening, I'll definitely surf over and take a look. I'm also cc'ing Doug McDaniel, who wrote the U2 piece, so that he can give you his input.

Cheers!
Rod


From Joseph V., Columbus, OH, USA:

Subject: POWERSSOUND ROCKS!

I know that POWERSOUND ROCKS is not the right idiom for people of our age but Bob Powers latest is a masterpiece. Rosemary Clooney and Michael Feinstein not rock stars but good solid musicians that deserve much more air time than they will ever get. Bob just knows how to get the essence of their performances in his column. Keep it up Bob!

Best Regards,
Another Ohio (former) musician,
Joe


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From David B., Dublin, IRELAND:

Subject: Lani Hall, Sergio Mendez, Herb Alpert

TO THE EDITOR

I WAS DELIGHTED TO FIND YOUR WEB PAGES WITH SOME INFORMATION ON THESE ARTISTS. I HAVE BEEN SEARCHING RECORD SHOPS IN VAIN FOR A COUPLE OF YEARS TRYING TO FIND A PARTICULAR TRACK THAT I HEARD AS A YOUNGER PERSON, THE TRACK IN QUESTION BEGAN WITH THE WORDS ...A STICK A STONE IT'S THE END OF THE ROAD, I AM HOPING AFTER READING THE ARTICLES ON YOUR SITE I HAVE FOUND THE TRACK IN QUESTION, WATERS OF MARCH.. IF NOT I WOULD BE VERY GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD LET ME KNOW THE NAME OF THE TRACK WHICH WAS ON AN ALBUM WITH SERGIO MENDEZ. I THINK POSSIBLY BRAZIL 88. I LOVE THE FEELING OF LATIN/BRAZILIAN MUSIC WHICH IS BOTH STIMULATING AND SOOTHING TO ME. EVEN THOUGH I DON'T UNDERSTAND THE LYRICS WHEN SUNG IN THEIR NATIVE LANGUAGE THEY MOVE ME AND MAKE ME FEEL HAPPY AND SAD, SOMETIMES BOTH AT ONCE. I AM AN IRISH NATIVE MYSELF YET FEEL MORE AT HOME LISTENING TO PORTUGUESE THAN IRISH LYRICS, IT IS THE BLEND OF THE MUSIC, EMOTION, AND EVEN COLOUR THAT I SEE IN MY MIND AS I LISTEN TO THE PIECE. ANYWAY I JUST WANTED TO SAY THANK YOU FOR THE BRILLIANT INSIGHT INTO THE ARTISTS OF BRAZIL WHOM I WILL BE LOOKING OUT FOR IN MUSIC STORES AS I CONTINUE MY SEARCH FOR THE TRACK/ALBUM

THANKFULLY YOURS.....
DAVID B.
DUBLIN
IRELAND.......


BOB POWERS RESPONDS: Dear David B.,

I found this website, which should give enough clues to find "A stick, a stone." Mendes recorded for A&M Records for most of his career.

I hope this helps. The site is: http://www.tijuanabrass.com/index.php3?refer=amcorner

I agree, Latin music is wonderful.

Bob Powers

MORE STUFF Folks Think We Need to Know

From Darryl C., Hershey, PA, USA:

Subject: A Fresher Perspective on the Cornell West vs. Harvard Issue

I think thatKendall Clark's views warrant wider distribution

Thank you for joining the BlackElectorate.com mailing list. Here is our latest editorial:

Criticizing Cornell By Kendall Clark In The New Republic's Notebook (TNR) last week, we find an entry called "Go West": "It should be no surprise that Harvard's new president, Lawrence Summers, recently asked Professor Cornel West to get serious about his scholarship.

Summers, after all, is the rare university president who cares more about academics than fund-raising; and West's activities of late -- spending more time recording a rap CD and stumping for Al Sharpton than doing academic work -- could not have sat well with him. But West has responded to Summers's reasonable request by raising the issue of race...West, of course, loves to mau-mau; and the confrontation with Summers was simply too good an opportunity to pass up. In an effort to raise the stakes, West is now threatening to leave Harvard for Princeton. So the question is: Will West continue to do nothing at Harvard? Or head south to do nothing at Princeton?" There are several curious claims here. First, it comes as a great surprise that Larry Summers is seen as prioritizing academics over economics; it would come as a great surprise to learn Summers prioritizes anything over economics, including human life. Summers was, after all, a Treasury bigwig when he suggested, infamously, in 1991, that the first world export pollution to the third world, as a matter of economic rationality, since the harms to economic productivity caused by pollution's ill-effects on worker health were cheaper if borne by third world economies, given the lower cost of worker wages. His appointment to the Harvard presidency was bitterly protested by some members of that community, but to no avail. What's even more curious is the TNR lauding Summers for valuing academics over economics while, in the next breath, it lauds him for attacking Professor Cornel West for not teaching often enough. Many institutional activities constitute the "academics" which, it's claimed, Summers values so highly, and explicit classroom instructional time is merely one such activity. But hectoring well-paid professors about the amount of time they spend on explicit classroom instruction is stereotypically a bottom-line concern. While there seem to be other things going on here, TNR's laudate of Summers is incoherent. Turning from Summers to Cornel West, philosopher and professor of African American Studies, TNR bashes West for supposedly ganging up, with Jesse Jackson, to harass poor, defenseless Harvard. West is perhaps the most well-known African American academic, and he's spent the bulk of his career engaged in real world political and social issues. Like other well-known academics, West is not afraid to take public stands on issues of importance. TNR, however, following (or leading?) the shock troops at National Review describes West's political activity as "mau-mauing", which is the way National Review and Pat Buchanan characterize West, too. Though the word seems to have originated, according to Thomas Wolfe's reportage, anyway, among African American activists of the 1960s, it's only used now by Whites to denigrate African Americans who struggle politically. But why, one might ask TNR, does West "of course" love to "mau-mau"? Is it some essential part of his nature? Does he do it compulsively? Is it, TNR seems to believe, just a "black thing"? Given that African American activists no longer speak this way about themselves, and given that the far right dismisses and belittles and mocks them in exactly this way, TNR puts itself on very shaking ground by using the highly racialized "mau-mau" term to describe West. But maybe it's not so shaky if we give up the idea that being a TNR liberal means having any interest in or commitment to political and social equality for African Americans? The entire passage stinks of racial implication. As interesting as the racial alliance between National Review, Pat Buchanan, and TNR is the shocking ignorance of the modern American university displayed in its attack on West. Does TNR really not know that one of the goals of becoming an academic star is so that you can teach less and do other stuff more? Every academic star of West's caliber spends less time teaching than engaging in one or another of the many activities that constitute the university as a social institution: research, grant-seeking, program - or discipline-formation, interdisciplinary conferencing, book or journal editing and writing, dissertation supervising, administrative work, and so on. All of which is an ordinary expression of the standard university reward system. One of the ways universities reward or lure academic stars is to promise lighter teaching loads. The number of hours one spends in the classroom is a perfectly ordinary chit in the reward system. Even non-star academics negotiate for less time in the classroom in favor of doing some other kind of academic duty or task. The degree to which West teaches or does other things is a function of his employment contract with Harvard, the extra-contractual perks West manages to secure (by negotiating with his department chair, the relevant deans).

If he's violated that contract, the debate would be taking place in those terms. Whether West chooses to record a hip hop CD during a year long medical leave -- to battle cancer, no less -- >from Harvard or not is, strictly speaking, an issue in which only Harvard and West have any real standing. But if doing so violated neither Harvard policy nor West's contract, why is Summers hounding him? And why is TNR joining the National Review in amplifying that hounding? One difference separating West from other star professors seems to be his public criticism of the Democratic Party machine after Bill Bradley withdrew from the 2000 presidential race; criticism which included West speaking for both Al Sharpton and Ralph Nader. Apparently for the very conventionally-minded Larry Summers, having anything to do with Sharpton or Nader is a high crime. And if politics has nothing to do with Summers' public attack on West, why West and why now? Further, criticizing West in terms that suggest he lacks scholarly seriousness is just plain dumb. TNR clearly -- if Leon Wieseltier's attack in the early 90s is any indication -- hates West and his politics, just as clearly, in fact, as West is hated by the National Review and Pat Buchanan crowd. However, making the case that he's not serious about scholarship is damnably hard. What West has done a lot of at Harvard is popularize his scholarly work,

which is a good thing unless you find the idea of a leftist African American professor reaching a larger audience with his critical ideas troubling. His critics retort that he hasn't published a book with a university press since 1989, trying to draw some sign of his lack of scholarly integrity from that fact. But every ambitious academic yearns for a popular audience. Non-university press books not only reach a bigger audience, they reach a different kind of audience, too. There are few academics who wouldn't like to see commercial publishers promote their work, no matter how technical or obscure; West's work is neither technical nor obscure but is accessible and critical. So in addition to all those other non-teaching institutional activities which academic stars are forever running after, we can add popularizing.

The American university has always needed and found popularizers. And it's often rewarded the really good ones. Cornel West is one of the good ones. Choosing to spread critical ideas about race, politics, economy, and power seems like a very good thing, especially if that makes those ideas more likely to be considered by young people, those who lack the privilege of formal education at Harvard, and so on. That Pat Buchanan, National Review, and Larry Summers attack West's kind of academic work is to be expected. It's another sign of how far rightward TNR has moved that it aids and abets them. Kendall Clark can be contacted at kendall@monkeyfist.com


From Douglas McDaniel, Haverhill, MA, USA:

Subject: Free Microsoft Reader eBooks and More from Mythville

"Sheriff Joe is out breathalyzing tonight, breathless and bluesy. While Victoria walks the street, shooting off her mouth, a human Uzi." From "Central Avenue," one of the poems found in "The Road to Mythville," by Douglas McDaniel New Microsoft Reader eBooks Offered: "Kachina's Son" and "The Road to Mythville" Part of a new offering, Mythville will trade two Microsoft Reader e-Books for your e-mail address. Please respond to mythville@yahoo.com and make sure you have downloaded the latest version of the reader at: Microsoft eBook Reader Download.

"All is Unfair in Media Arts And War" Mythville's latest offering to G21.net, "Media Arts in War," has won high praise for low pay from its editor, Rod Amis: "Sporadic but consistent contributor DOUGLAS MCDANIEL, who produces our 'Mythville Project' feature, never ceases to amaze me. When he plays to his strength, gonzo journalism, he produces some of the finest work it's been my pleasure to feature in The World's Magazine. That has never been more true than this week. I encourage you to read his piece, 'North Shore Art in War.' It's probably the best writing I've read on The Aftermath thus far.". G21.net.

'William Blake in Cyberspace' Is Comic Strip Hero
Unheralded comic genius Cal Rhodes has rendered Douglas McDaniel, aka, "William Blake in Cyberspace," as a tragic comic strip figure. Plastic miniature replicas soon to follow at Avatars R Us. Savage Pilgrims.

'William Blake in Cyberspace' Makes On-Stage Debut
One year after the inception of this Mythville pet project, "William Blake in Cyberspace" is making its on-stage debut at the Wingate Street Micro Theatah in Haverhill, Massachusetts. For further developments on this off-beat cyber satire and author performances and readings by Douglas McDaniel, got to Myth Whistle.

"The Road to Mythville" available at iUniverse.com
A new collection of poems by Douglas McDaniel is available as a print-on-demand product at the iUniverse.com bookstore. Just plug "Road to Mythville" into the title search engine, and everything seems pretty apparent after that.

Calvin, We Never Knew Ya He calls himself Calvin Rhodes, and he's a comic genius. But whatever you do, be careful if you lend him your land line.Savage Pilgrims.

'Access Denied'
It seems incredible that exactly a year ago Access Internet Magazine was the toast of the post-internet publishing world with a weekly circulation of more than 10 million. Now it's a ruin. Former senior editor Douglas McDaniel gives his bittersweet, very subjective take on the rise and fall of a dangerous idea that almost made sense. Automous Author.

Mythville unveils MetaMedia Lab

Yes, the road to Mythville has led to 63 River St., Haverhill, Massachusetts 01830. Potential clients for its electronic publishing and creative consulting services should call in advance by telephone at 866 639 6988 (in Boston: 978 373 9599) or by the e-mail at mythville@yahoo.com.

Mythville teams up with Telluride Tech Fest A new metamedia exhibit to support the Telluride Tech Festival (www.telluridetechfest.com: when it's up and running this spring) is now open at the Mythville MetaMedia Lab in Haverhill, MA. On sale are books and media materials on Nikola Tesla, the man behind the proverbial curtain for the festival. All proceeds will go to support the festival, which enters its third year this August in Telluride, Colorado. Interested parties can visit Mythvilles supporting site (http://telluridetechno.blogspot.com) or Scott Brown at scottbrown@rmi.net.

Glasnost Lost: A Living Experiment in A Severing of Earthly Bonds
On Dec. 13, 2000, Mythville MetaMedia Publisher Douglas McDaniel decided he would do three things: 1) Work from home; 2) Relinquish his use of the automobile as an act of civil disobedience; 3) Do everything he could to live without a driver's license, or, anything else that required his social security number. Glasnost Lost is the living document of this experience. Just Huck, Baby!

The old Ft. Deven west of Boston, once an evacuation base during the First World War, was the recent site of a season finale for very curious cult, the Ultima Frisbee crowd. Talk about passing the plate and sparring the amunition. G21.net.

The Very Microbes of Haverhill
Haverhill, Massachusetts, is the home of the old Archie's comix and arguably the best adult alternative radio station in America, 92.5 FM, "The River," but now it has something even more comical in a town that seems to be hell bent on shooting itself in the foot, the Wingate Street Micro Theatah. Which goes by the slogan, "a good place to not be seen." Coda.

'Too Many Horses,' and Mythville Verse A very recent batch of poems, written in Ipswich and Concord, Massachusetts, during a time of war are unveiled at the usual Mythville suspects, Kachina's Son. Released as drafts with a special nod of thanks to the elegant and swift bards of Concord and Ipswich, where real poetry lives and breathes each day.


From Tamara Hernandez Danel, Taxco, MEXICO:

Subject: We Send You Warm Greetings

We send you warm greetings from Taxco, Guerrero, hoping that you are well in health and spirit.

Before anything else, we hope that you had wonderful holidays, and that this year started to be the best of all in history!

We want to thank you for your time this last year, the fact that you pay attention to us is very valued. We give thanks to have met you.

We also wanted to comment to you about a big project that we completed this last year: A customer of ours came to visit us last year 2001, and commented to us about a company in the United States where we could get medical equipment donated for our hospital, Adolfo Prieto. (I say "our hospital" because is a public hospital, as poor as we are, and to which most of us have had to go to get medical attention for ourselves and for our children).

We got in contact with this company in the United States, and after convincing them to donate it, we spoke to the officials of DHL International, so they would facilitate the shipping of this equipment for free. They also accepted, and gave us a list of the documents required to be filled by our State Government.

Then we got in contact with the Secretary of Health of the State of Guerrero to get all the documents to import the equipment, and after some time we got the documents all made, signed, etc.

Now the equipment is in the hospital Adolfo Prieto. We want to invite you to see pictures and the history in our web site, this is the address: http://www.artcamp.com.mx

The reason why we did all this, was so the doctors and nurses of the hospital would know and recognize us, because, as we don't have health insurance, having a good relationship with them, it is more probable to get the necessary attention in case that we need it or any of our children have an illness or an accident.

Well, I didn't mean for this letter to be long, but I really enjoyed telling you about this achievement of our cooperative.

This letter was just to wish you a very nice new year 2002, and tell you that here in Taxco you have your friends of Artesanas Campesinas. We are happy to have met you and wish you the best for this year and the future.

Sincerely,
Tamara Hernndez Danel
Artesanas Campesinas


From Ric W., Austin, TX, USA:

Subject: Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth

http://serendipity.magnet.ch/wot/bl_tft.htm#topview

French authors Jean-Charles Brisard and Guillaume Dasquie recently published a book entitled Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth which tells of the negotiations for oil pipeline rights in Afghanistan that collapsed in August 2001 after the U.S. told the Taliban: Accept our offer of a carpet of gold or you'll get a carpet of bombs.

Julio Godoy: U.S. Policy on Taliban Influenced by Oil
Lara Marlowe: U.S. Efforts to Make Peace Summed up by 'OIL'
TOP VIEW: New Book Details Bush/Big Oil Negotiations With Taliban Before WTC - U.S. Policy on Taliban Influenced by Oil By Julio Godoy

Under the influence of United States oil companies, the government of President George W. Bush initially blocked intelligence agencies' investigations on terrorism while it bargained with the Taliban on the delivery of Osama bin Laden in exchange for political recognition and economic aid, two French intelligence analysts claim.



What are we to make of all of this? One possible conclusion is that the bin Laden terror problem was allowed to get out of hand because bin Laden, himself, had powerful protectors in both Washington and Saudi Arabia. If that's true, no wonder the Bush administration prefers that he be killed rather than allowed to testify in open court.

The other conclusions - questions really - have to do with the justification for the war on Afghanistan. If the Taliban unilaterally offered in February to extradite bin Laden (an offer they repeated after Sept. 11), were they just kidding? If not, was the war necessary?

http://www.newsmax.com/ubb/Forum10/HTML/001237.html

AN INTRIGUING new book, just published in France, details the curiously amicable relationship between the regime of U.S. President George W. Bush and Afghanistan's Taliban, a relationship that turned hostile only after the terror attacks of Sept. 11.

Ben Laden: La Verit Interdite (Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth) is written by former French spook Jean-Charles Brisard and journalist Guillaume Dasquie. Both are said to be plugged into the murky world of intelligence. During his time with French intelligence, Brisard was regarded as something of an expert on bin Laden's finances.

The nub of their argument is that the Bush regime's attitude toward the Taliban - and even to bin Laden - was driven by the new president's fixation on energy. A stable regime in Afghanistan would allow construction of an oil and gas pipeline from the former Soviet republics in Central Asia to Pakistan and the sea. And initially, Washington's best bet for a stable regime in Afghanistan was the Taliban.

From February, when the Taliban first offered to extradite bin Laden in exchange for U.S. recognition, until August when negotiations stalled, the Bush administration and the government it later labelled a terrorist regime got along just fine.

Indeed, the book quotes John O'Neill, a former director of anti-terrorism for the Federal Bureau of Investigation as complaining that American and Saudi oil interests acting through the U.S. State Department kept interfering with efforts to track down bin Laden.

In particular, the authors say, O'Neill was irked after the State Department refused to let his FBI team return to Yemen to investigate the terrorist bombing of the USS Cole there last year. Frustrated, he quit to take a private sector job. Unfortunately for him, that job was as head of security in New York's World Trade Center. O'Neill was killed on Sept. 11.

Skeptics might argue that his death proved convenient for the authors. Now there is no one to dispute their account of what he said. Certainly, Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth has the whiff of an old-fashioned conspiracy theory starring the usual panoply of villains.

Still, the details that Brisard and Dasquie provide (including the fact that the Taliban hired the niece of former CIA director Richard Helms to orchestrate their publicity) do not contradict what was already known about the relationship between Washington and its soon-to-be arch-enemy. In fact, they support it.

Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid's well-regarded book Taliban: Islam, Oil And The New Great Game in Central Asia outlines how oil politics has affected U.S. policy in Afghanistan. The Taliban's unprecedented offer to extradite bin Laden to a third country, well before the Sept. 11 attacks, was reported by the Times of London in February. In September, this newspaper reported on the often cozy relationship between Washington and the Taliban.

Last month, the Washington Post reported that Sudan had offered in 1996 to extradite bin Laden, who was wanted at that time for attacks on U.S. servicemen in Saudi Arabia.

However, the U.S. declined that offer. Instead, it agreed with Sudan's decision to deport bin Laden and his entourage to a place where he couldn't do any damage - Afghanistan. The official reason for U.S. reluctance was that it wasn't sure a case against him could stand up in court. Saudi Arabia, the other extradition destination proposed by the Sudanese, refused to take him

But there is a pattern. Earlier this month, the Guardian, a U.K. newspaper, reported that FBI agents had been told by the Bush administration to back off investigating members of the bin Laden clan living in the U.S. In September, the Wall Street Journal documented the lucrative business connections between the bin Laden family and senior U.S. Republicans, including the president's father, George Bush Sr.

What are we to make of all of this? One possible conclusion is that the bin Laden terror problem was allowed to get out of hand because bin Laden, himself, had powerful protectors in both Washington and Saudi Arabia. If that's true, no wonder the Bush administration prefers that he be killed rather than allowed to testify in open court.

The other conclusions - questions really - have to do with the justification for the war on Afghanistan. If the Taliban unilaterally offered in February to extradite bin Laden (an offer they repeated after Sept. 11), were they just kidding? If not, was the war necessary?

This question will become particularly important if the U.S. fails to find the terrorist it says started this war, the man it allowed to go to Afghanistan in the first place.


From Prognostics.com, (No City Provided,) FRANCE:

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En bonus, vous trouverez galement de temps autre, un pronostic coupl gagnant en champ rduit dans une course bien prcise, ainsi quun pronostic sur le Classic Tierc et un autre sur le Multi, toujours dans les courses de trot. Pour ces paris, aucun bilan, ces jeux tant laisss votre libre apprciation. Sachez tout de mme quils ont une bonne russite et une bonne rentabilit.

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From KRAFT FOODS, USA:

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